Thursday, March 28, 2024

NZ officers rush to find new jobs


WELLINGTON (March 26): The New Zealand Government’s determination to slash the Public Service is proving to be a bonanza for recruitment agencies as workers head for the exit in an attempt to beat the expected rush.

The Ministry for Primary Industries has announced it is looking to cut 231 staff, while the Ministry of Health is consulting on cutting 180 roles.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment has made a second call on its staff to accept voluntary redundancy.

It has already received 111 applications, and those staff will be leaving on March 31.

Senior Director at the Robert Walters Agency, Bridget Clarke said the Public Service cuts were set to have a big impact in Wellington.

"We've definitely seen an uplift in candidate applications and there's also been a rise in the quality of candidates applying for roles," Ms Clarke said.

"We've seen applications from candidates with exceptional skills and talent, so if you're a hiring manager, now's a great time to be looking to hire."

Ms Clarke said many in the public sector would have skills that were transferrable to other areas.

However, it remained to be seen how many would be willing to transfer out of Wellington, to big job markets like Auckland and Australia.

"Remote working will be interesting to watch. Post-COVID, we've obviously seen an uplift in remote working, so that will be something that people can consider," Ms Clarke said

She said Robert Walters' eight Australian offices had already seen an increase in enquiries from New Zealand workers.

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Minister plans ‘transformation’ of judiciary

BUENOS AIRES (March 22): Argentina’s Justice Minister, Mariano CĂșneo Libarona says he plans an “absolute transformation” of Argentina’s justice system, including steps to change the penal code and introduce trial by jury.

Calling it an historic moment in Argentina’s history, Mr Libarona said there would be a complete change to the accusatory system, as all cases would be assessed by the Public Prosecutor’s Office, which would then decide how to proceed.

"This means the presence of a prosecutor who investigates, the defence and an impartial, different judge who performs the essential jurisdictional tasks," he said.

“Every case goes to the Public Prosecutor who analyses whether the case is worth investigating or whether it is insignificant; whether an abbreviated trial or a conciliation approach can be proposed." 

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President pressured over anti-gay law

ACCRA (March 22): The Speaker of Ghana's Parliament says he will block approval of new Ministers until President Nana Akufo-Addo signs an anti-LGBTQ+ Bill approved by Parliament last month.

Speaker, Alban Bagbin has condemned as “contemptuous” the President’s delay over the legislation, that criminalises gay relationships and anyone who supports them.

President Akufo-Addo is under intense pressure from those Ghanaians who want him to sign it into law, and from Western donors and human rights groups who are urging him not to approve it.

The Bill has been challenged in the Supreme Court on the ground there was not a quorum in Parliament when it was passed, and Presidential Secretary, Nana Asante Bediatuo said it would be improper for the President to sign it until the court makes a decision on the matter.

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Inflation-linked pay rise for officers

PRETORIA (March 21): South Africa’s Department of Public Service and Administration has announced that the country’s Civil Servants will receive a 4.7 per cent pay rise from April 1.

This is in line with a two-year wage deal signed by public sector trade unions in March last year which guaranteed a wage increase of 7.5 per cent for 2023-24 and an inflation-linked wage rise for 2024-25.

Department spokesperson, Moses Mushi said the figure was based on the South African Reserve Bank’s forecast from the second quarter of 2024 to the end of the first quarter of 2025, which was about 4.6 per cent.

In addition, qualifying bureaucrats, including the lowest-paid and those who have received a satisfactory performance rating, will also receive a ‘pay progression’ increase of 1.5 per cent from July.

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Union hits back over work-shy allegation

SAINT PETER PORT (March 23): A former Deputy Chief Minister of Guernsey has accused the Channel Island’s Public Servants of trying to avoid work they are mandated to do.

Mark Helyar made the allegation after it was found officials knew about a potential £30 million ($A58 million) hospital cost overrun, saying that the message 'we don't have any money' did not seem to be getting through to the Civil Service.

A spokesperson for Prospect, the union which represents Civil Servants in Guernsey, said union members were dedicated and had no right of reply when criticised.

"We would like to remind everyone that the Civil Service is a body of people that works hard, often in demanding circumstances, to ensure that islanders receive effective public services across a wide range of areas,” the spokesperson said.

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Black Civil Service charge ‘divisive’

HAMILTON (March 25): A union representing Bermuda’s Public Servants has condemned comments made by Opposition candidate, Robert King as “deeply divisive”.

Mr King, who represents the One Bermuda Alliance, said young Bermudians were leaving the island because “they don’t feel their needs are getting addressed by a Black Government and a Black Civil Service who you would expect to be well equipped to deal with Black problems”.

President of the Bermuda Public Services Union, Armell Thomas said attributing the decision to leave the island solely to the racial composition of the Civil Service was not only misguided but deeply divisive.

“It undermines the integrity and dedication of every member of our diverse Civil Service who work tirelessly to serve Bermuda with unwavering commitment, regardless of race,” Mr Thomas said.

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Long road ahead to EU membership

SARAJEVO (March 22): Bosnia-Herzegovina’s path to membership of the European Union is open — but it is likely to be a long journey.

EU leaders have agreed in principle to begin membership negotiations after the European Commission agreed to start talks in spite of deep, lingering ethnic divisions in the nation of 3.2 million inhabitants.

President of the European Council, which defines the general political direction of the bloc, Charles Michel said Bosnia-Herzegovina’s place was with the European family, but a lot of work remained to be done.

He emphasised the need for the to keep on taking “all relevant steps set out by the Commission that include economic, judicial and political reforms as well as better efforts to tackle corruption and money laundering”.

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PM rejects end-of-Ramadan bonus

KUALA LUMPUR (March 26): Malaysian Prime Minister, Anwar Ibrahim says there will be no special bonus payment for the country’s Civil Servants to mark the end of Ramadan (Hari Raya Aidilfitri), breaking a decade-long tradition. 

Mr Anwar said Government workers should have put aside part of the recent RM2,000 ($A648) early incentive payment for the celebration.

However, he sought to soften the blow by hinting there would be benefits, including salary increments, for Civil Servants once the review of the Public Service Remuneration System Study had been completed.

The Prime Minister was responding to a call from the Congress of Unions of Employees in the Public and Civil Services to provide a Hari Raya Aidilfitri allowance to Civil Servants and Government retirees.

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Top bureaucrat quits male-only club

LONDON (March 21): The head of the United Kingdom Civil Service, Simon Case has resigned from the all-male private members’ Garrick Club after being questioned by MPs about his involvement in the institution.

His resignation comes despite having claimed to MPs that he was working to reform the club, saying it was “easier to change the all-male rule from within rather than chuck rocks from the outside”.

His comments came after The Guardian newspaper published the Garrick Club’s membership list, which it claimed included the King, Deputy Prime Minister, Oliver Dowden and Sir Richard Moore, the head of MI6. Sir Richard is also reported to have quit the club.

Mr Case had been asked by Labour MP, Liam Byrne whether he could “foster a genuine culture of inclusiveness” in the Civil Service “while being a member of an all-male club”.

         A regular update of Public Service news and events from around the world



 

 

 

 

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Black Hats find fertile ground in Africa


The destructive effects of fake news and disinformation have been in the news again recently, with examples of how the internet and social media can be weaponised to deliberately create harm.

Whether it is the hounding of royals and other celebrities, or the calculated acts of rogue States, there can now be no doubt the internet, once hailed as the new dawn of instant communication, bringing us all closer together, has a dark side being ruthlessly exploited by those with no other desire than to create confusion and mischief that serves their own ends.

There are all too many examples of how it can be commanded by those whose morals and ethics are entirely absent, and worse still, how they can find an audience only too willing to consume the evils they promulgate.

So it is more with sadness than anger I find another report on the subject, this from the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies, based within the United States Defence Department.

Researchers have found that disinformation campaigns seeking to manipulate African information systems have increased fourfold in just two years, mostly designed to destabilise existing Governments, and often leading to deadly violence, military coups and the diminution of freedoms and democracy.

Africa is the last continent to fully embrace the internet and its social media offshoots — it also seems to be the continent where black-hat hackers can wield their evil influence most effectively.

They feed off instability, and many African regimes are vulnerable in this regard. The Africa Centre says this has had “real-world consequences for diminishing Africans’ rights, freedoms and security”.

It points the finger at Russia “as the primary purveyor of disinformation on the continent, sponsoring 80 documented campaigns, targeting more than 22 countries”. It believes fake pages and posts number in the tens of thousands.

Mostly targeted are those countries with fragile or failing democracies, encouraging authoritarian or military rule. 

While Russia leads the pack, other nations, including China, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar, are also active, according to the centre. There are also any numbers of so-called non-State actors.

One highlighted in the report, Team Jorge, operating out of Israel, has reportedly implemented disinformation campaigns to disrupt more than 20 African election campaigns since 2015.

Domestic groups, all with their particular agendas, complete the sorry picture.

While for many, Africa’s situation seems far removed from the institutions and protections that exists in the West, no one is immune, especially when a survey finds that 13 per cent of Americans still believe the Apollo Moon landings are a hoax.

From that kind of credulous base, it is easy to see how 30 per cent of the US population have been persuaded the 2020 Biden Presidential win was rigged, especially when the loser insists it is the case.

What we are seeing is a direct and persistent assault on Western-style democracies, using the very institutions that are cherished — free speech, freedom of the press — to undermine Governments and question the rule of law.

Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the European democracies may be far removed from the situation in many African countries, but as the revelation of mass hacking attempting to compromise Western electoral systems demonstrates, these problems can be ignored at our peril.

Yes, it can happen here.      

Thursday, March 21, 2024

Officers may sue over UK deportations


LONDON (March 15): United Kingdom Civil Servants are threatening Ministers with legal action over concerns that senior Home Office staff could be in breach of international law if they implement the Government’s Rwanda deportation legislation.

The FDA union, which represents senior Civil Servants, has warned its members could be in violation of the Civil Service Code — and open to possible prosecution — if they followed a Minister’s demands to ignore a deportation ban on asylum seekers from the European Court of Human Rights at Strasbourg.

It has sent a pre-action legal letter to Home Secretary, James Cleverly (pictured), calling for clarity, with a request to either amend the legislation or change the Code.

The Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill states that it is for Ministers to decide whether to comply with decisions by the European Court to temporarily halt a deportation.

“The concern of the FDA and many of its members is that if Ministers instruct Civil Servants not to comply with an interim measures indication, they will be putting the UK in breach of international law,” the letter said.

The Government is expected to try to get the first flights off the ground before the end of the month, with people who have been refused asylum offered thousands of pounds to move to Rwanda voluntarily.

The proposals, which are separate from the main scheme and are understood to have been agreed with Rwanda, are designed to remove people who have no legal right to stay in the UK, but cannot be returned to their home country.

It will be aimed at individuals who do not have an outstanding asylum claim and are in a position to be relocated swiftly.

An intervention by a Strasbourg judge last June stopped the only attempted deportation flight from taking off for Rwanda.

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Call for new Department to lead Civil Service

LONDON (March 14): A report by the United Kingdom’s Institute for Government states the bureaucracy has failed successive Prime Ministers and calls for a new Department for the Civil Service (DCS).

The report, Power with Purpose, says the DCS would “take on the leadership, management and capability of the Civil Service”, including the teams responsible for setting and enforcing functional standards of practice, Civil Service talent, learning and development, and modernisation and reform.

The report says the Institute was usually the first to urge caution around such machinery of Government changes as "they can be disruptive and distracting…but we have concluded that the current structure inhibits effective delivery of Government priorities”.

The report recommends the creation of a senior First Secretary of State with Ministerial responsibility for the Civil Service to lead the new Department, replacing the role of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.

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AI’s fake news ‘threat to democracy’

SEOUL (March 19): Launching South Korea’s Summit for Democracy, President Yoon Suk Yeol has described fake news and disinformation based on AI and digital technology as threats to democracy.

Meanwhile, some officials attending the global summit accused Russia and China of conducting malicious propaganda campaigns.

Mr Yoon said countries had a duty to share experiences and wisdom so that artificial intelligence and technology could be employed to promote democracy.

"Fake news and disinformation based on artificial intelligence and digital technology not only violates individual freedom and human rights, but also threatens democratic systems," Mr Yoon said.

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Controversial Israeli official in row over tweets

JERUSALEM (March 19): The official spokesperson for the Israeli Government, Eylon Levy, has been suspended, the Office of Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu says.

The reason for the suspension was not stated, although Israeli media speculated that Mr Levy had overstepped the line in responding to a tweet by British Foreign Secretary, David Cameron concerning humanitarian aid to Gaza.

The official was in the news a few weeks ago when the wife of the Prime Minister, Sara Netanyahu, tried to have him sacked for taking part in the judicial reform protests before the Israel-Hamas War.

This sparked outrage among both supporters and opponents of the Government at the time, but Mr Levy kept his job. Now, it seems, those who wanted him to go may have got their way.

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Finns hit back over Russian migrant push

HELSINKI (March 20): Finland’s Ministry of the Interior has drafted a Bill that would allow the Government to deny entry to asylum seekers and restrict the reception of asylum applications in circumstances where it is necessary to combat external attempts to influence the country.

Prime Minister, Petteri Orpo said Russia had orchestrated a flow of migrants to the Finnish border, effectively utilising asylum seekers and migrants seeking a better life to undermine national security and public order.

Ministers and senior Public Servants have acknowledged the Bill could come into conflict with the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the European Union’s Charter of Fundamental Rights.

Head of Legal Affairs at the Border Guard Department of the Ministry of the Interior, Sanna Palo said the move was challenging legislatively, but that international treaties concerning the right to seek asylum were established at a time when no State was abusing them.

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Governor defiant over Argentine pay rises

BUENOS AIRES (March 19): The Governor of the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires has announced a 13.5 per cent pay rise for State teachers, police officers and public employees in the capital.

The move, by Axel Kicillof, is in defiance of President Javeir Milei’s cost-cutting plans.

The Governor, who belongs to the Opposition Peronist Party, also announced an increase of 110 per cent in ordinary and extraordinary family allowances, a move that will benefit more than 100,000 families, and a 46 per cent increase in minimum retirement pension and non-contributory payments.

"We are making a great effort to protect the incomes of the people of Buenos Aires Province in the face of the inflation caused by the national Government's economic program," Mr Kicillof said.

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Security law targets new offences

HONG KONG (March 19): The Hong Kong Government has fast-tracked a new security law which targets new offences like external interference and insurrection, with penalties including life sentences.

The legislation was rushed through the pro-Beijing Legislative Council in less than two weeks, authorities saying it was necessary for stability. However, critics fear a further erosion of civil liberties.

Titled Article 23, the legislation expands on the controversial National Security Law imposed by China earlier.

Chief Executive,  John Lee said Article 23 was also necessary to guard against "potential sabotage and undercurrents that try to create trouble, particularly ideas of an independent Hong Kong".

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Officials in bid to stem Haitian violence

PORT-AU-PRINCE (March 20): Senior Haitian Public Servants and politicians are struggling to put together a Transitional Council to govern the island nation until elections can be held and a proper Government formed.

Haiti has been rocked by a surge of unrest since February when armed gangs raided a prison, releasing thousands of inmates and demanding interim Prime Minister, Ariel Henry resign.

Mr Henry has agreed to step down and allow the formation of a provisional Government, but negotiations have been slow despite pressure from neighbouring Caribbean countries and the United States.

At present the gangs seem to be the only authority in Haiti with police stations, power stations, public buildings and facilities attacked and looted, and bodies left strewn in the streets.

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Prosecutor blocks journalist’s release

KINSHASA (March 19): The State Prosecutor in the Democratic Republic of Congo has appealed against the six months sentence imposed on freelance journalist, Stanis Bujakera for spreading false information, barring his imminent release from prison.

Mr Bujakera was arrested in September after he reported that a prominent Congolese Opposition politician, Cherubin Okende had been murdered by Congolese military intelligence. Mr Okende's bullet-riddled body was found in his car in the capital, Kinshasa.

The journalist was finally sentenced to six months jail last week and fined 1 million Congolese francs ($A551). One of his employers paid the fine and he was expected to be released on the basis of time already served.

However, the appeal by the State Prosecutor, which had initially demanded a 20-year sentence, means Mr Bujakera could be behind bars indefinitely as the lengthy appeal process works through the courts.

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Senior Estonian officials get pay boost

TALLINN (March 17): The Ministry of Finance has announced that senior Estonian Public Servants, including the President, Parliament’s Speaker, and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, are to receive pay rises of nearly 1o per cent

The three roles carry the same base monthly wage of €8,318 ($A13.696), and will now rise to just under €9,200 ($A15,148).

Many other senior Public Servants will also be getting pay raises, though in this case at around the five per cent mark.

The average gross monthly wage in Estonia for the final quarter of last year stood at €1,904 ($A3,135).

 

A regular update of Public Service news and events from around the world

 

 

Monday, March 18, 2024

Cyber-criminals are making prisoners of all of us


One morning recently I received a text saying that I had an outstanding tollway bill and faced further sanctions if it were not paid.

Next came an email ‘alerting’ me to the fact that $6000 had been withdrawn from my account via PayPal, and to click on the following link to confirm or challenge it. 

Finally, I got a phone call where a recorded message asked me to confirm the withdrawal of a considerable sum of money from my ANZ account. 

It was just another morning dealing with the incessant assaults of cyber-crime.

I no longer own or drive a car, I am not an ANZ customer and I could quickly check that nothing had been withdrawn from the accounts I have with my actual bank. However, these irritating interruptions to my day are now routine.

In the wider world we hear of new and ever more sophisticated scams. Cyber-criminals are especially active around the end of the financial year when people file their tax returns, but can pop up at almost any time.

I read recently of a long-running spoofing scam targeting customers of HSBC. The hackers have somehow managed to insert their texts, warning of a suspicious transaction, into a chain of legitimate messages from the bank.

It causes the recipient to panic and call a number that connects them to a fake fraud team. There is even an HSBC on-hold message.

I will not go into the depressing details of how much HSBC customers have lost though this one scam – just to say that it is in the millions.

When every new trick is revealed we get the same routine information: Be aware, frequently change your password, check back with your institution; don’t take offers at face value, block fake callers, the list goes on and on.

Governments say they are constantly trying to shut down bogus websites, only for them to pop up again in a different form – the cyber-criminals always seem to be one jump ahead.  

So it all boils down to us, the long-suffering recipients of this daily outrage, to protect ourselves. We have become prisoners, forced to lock ourselves behind expensive virus and malware protection, while the rogues circle around us, probing for the slightest weakness that will allow them to break in and rob us blind.  

It should not be like this. My generation has lived long enough to remember when it was not — when the sums in our bank accounts were written in a passbook which we could keep safely at home; when our pay at work came round in brown envelopes hand-delivered by a friendly member of the Accounts Department; when we could store our live savings under our mattresses if we wished.

We have been forced to use the internet, and employers insist we have a bank account in which to deposit our earnings. Of course there are advantages — it is more difficult to blow our wages on one drunken night out for a start. For this we are grateful, but it should also be the responsibility of Governments to protect us from the vulnerabilities it involves.

I will not go so far as a friend driven to distraction and raging over the hackers: “We know where they are — send one of these bloody drones and take them out.”

We actually do know where most of them are. According to Chainalysis, which is a blockchain data platform, North Korea is a hotbed of State-sponsored cyber-crime with stolen funds in the billions supporting the regime of Kim Jong-Un.

Russia and China are also in the business of stealing secretes and spreading misinformation and confusion on the web.

When nuclear weapons threatened to turn the world into ashes, Governments acted and sought to limit the threat. Cyber-crime may not present such an obvious danger to civilisation at the moment, but it is a danger nonetheless.

The time has come for the world to come together to face this problem. An international treaty outlawing the cyber-crime with an international ‘police force’ with powers of investigation would be a start.

Countries refusing to sign should be targeted and isolated, their access to the internet curtailed as far as possible.   

There will be plenty of arguments against this and maybe the current fraught international situation makes it impossible, but it should be on the table.

In the meantime we have to be on our guard for every time the phone rings, or the computer is switched on.  

 

Thursday, March 14, 2024

Reaching out during Ramadan


It is wholly understandable that peak Muslim bodies in Australia have announced they will not attend State-Government sponsored Iftar dinners in NSW and Victoria. The respective Premiers are right in cancelling them altogether.

The fraught situation within the Australian community, with its ever-deepening divisions over attitudes to the Gaza War, would have only been worsened had the dinners, with their political connections, gone ahead.

Attendees would have been branded as being on one side of the argument and absentees the other. 

The fact that fighting continues through the Holy Month of Ramadan is bad enough, and the political dinners would only have inflamed tensions further.

In this context I was heartened to see the initiative taken by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in extending an open invitation to attend an Interfaith Iftar Dinner at its Baitul Huda Mosque in Sydney on 23 March – an attempt, as Grand Imam Kauser says, to build bridges in times of difficulty.

The fact that this invitation has come from the grass roots of Muslim Australia to all Australians, regardless of faith, or indeed, no faith at all; “of all perspectives” as the community says, is a bold initiative and one that deserves support.

I hope that it can be repeated in other towns and cities around the nation where Ramadan is celebrated and Iftar dinners held.  

In a world that often seems to be coming apart at the seams, it is good to see that in Australia at least, there are those who still want to reach out in the spirit of peace and mutual respect.

Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Games bonuses for restive public workers


PARIS (March 11): French Civil Servants will be offered bonuses to be deployed across Paris during the Olympic and Paralympic Games in an effort to avoid threatened strikes, Minister for Transformation and Public Administration, Stanislas Guerini says.

Eligible employees will get a bonus ranging from 500 ($A827) to 1,500 ($A2,480), in addition to their salaries, for working during the Olympics and the Paralympics, Mr Guerini (pictured) said. He did not provide details on the criteria for the payments.

The announcement came after a major French union warned of possible strikes, including at hospitals, during the Olympics, when a massive influx of people is expected in the French capital.

The social situation in France remains tense, amid recent protests from teachers, police officers and farmers that followed huge demonstrations last year against the rise in retirement age.

Last month, employees at the Eiffel Tower shut down one of the world's most visited sites for six days with a strike, demanding not only salary increases, but also better maintenance of the historic landmark.

The 135-year-old tower will feature prominently in the Summer Games. The Olympic and Paralympic medals are being embedded with pieces from a hexagonal chunk of iron taken from the historic landmark.

The Paris Tourism Office estimates that close to 16 million people will visit the region between July and September.

Mr Guerini said the Government would set up nurseries for Civil Servants on duty during the Games, and would allocate 1,000 places in summer camps to help working parents with children on school holidays.

In addition, employees with children would receive a bonus of up to 200 ($A330) per child, and 350 ($A578) would be allocated for each child to single-parent families.

“The whole country wants to avoid strikes during the Olympic Games. The Games have to be a success for the whole nation,” Mr Guerini said.

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President seeks to axe State news agency

BUENOS AIRES (March 11): Argentina’s far-right President, Javier Milei says he will close the State news agency, TĂ©lam, as it is “an instrument of propaganda”, suspending the Agency’s 700 workers on full pay and fencing off its headquarters in Buenos Aires.

Senior officials at TĂ©lam say they have been authorised to offer a voluntary retirement program. However, the workers have voted to reject it and have set up a website in an attempt to keep publishing.

Some onlookers say that achieving the Government's goal of closing the 80-year-old organisation will not be easy.

Lawmaker, Margarita Stolbizer said it was not possible to eliminate by decree bodies created by law.

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Lawmakers split over three-term limit

OSLO (March 8): Months of scandal and conflicts of interest surrounding top Norwegian politicians appears to be at an end after Parliament voted unanimously to “strongly criticise” former Prime Minister, Erna Solberg and “officially criticise” several other MPs and Ministers.

However, Parliament is split over a proposal to limit MPs to no more than three terms after proponents pointed out Ms Solberg had spent 34 years in Parliament and had become “entrenched”.

Socialist Left Party MP, Ingrid Fiskaa said Ms Solberg and her long-serving colleagues had formed an elite class of politicians living and working in Oslo who risked losing contact with the people who elected them.

However, 79-year-old Carl Hagen, of the Progress Party, said he felt no obligation to give up his seat in favour of younger politicians, citing the value of his experience.

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Contrasting results in human rights research

TBILISI (March 8): A survey of Georgian Public Servants has found them to be in strong support of human rights and equality principles, advocating for robust State responses to violations and discrimination.

However, the research by the United Nations Development Program also uncovered persistent stereotypes and prejudice, particularly in regard to gender roles, persons with disabilities, ethnic and religious minorities, and LGBTQI+ communities.

The research also spotlighted several human rights that bureaucrats considered most frequently violated in Georgia, including the right to equality, living in a healthy environment, the right to life, inviolability of personal and family life, and inviolability of honour and dignity.

Notably, sex-disaggregated data showed that female Public Servants were better informed and more sensitive to issues faced by vulnerable groups.

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Strike ballot follows four-day week rejection

LONDON (March 9): The United Kingdom’s largest Civil Service union will launch a strike ballot for its  160,000 members after the Government rejected its claim for a four-day working week for the same pay.

The Public and Commercial Service Union also said the Government had refused to meet its demands on pensions, justice and job protection.

In refusing to consider the four-day week proposal, Cabinet Office Minister, John Glen said evidence in favour of it was “slim at best”.

A Cabinet Office spokesperson encouraged unions to continue to engage with officials as part of the usual process, saying this year’s pay remit guidance would be published in due course.

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PM in favour of shorter hours for women

KUALA LUMPUR (March 10): Current reforms to the Malaysian Civil Service Remuneration System will include shorter working hours for women employees to enable them to better care for their families, Prime Minister, Anwar Ibrahim has predicted.

"I will discuss with the Chief Secretary to the Government and the Director-General of the Public Service to provide flexibility for women, even with slightly lower salaries,” Mr Anwar said.

Mr Anwar, who is also the Finance Minister, said Malaysia would become the first country in the world to provide such flexibility to female Civil Servants.

“It is time to change the conventional thinking because there are women who have to leave valuable careers to take care of their families,” the Prime Minister said.

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‘Millions’ for women’s health research

THE HAGUE (March 10): Netherlands Health Minister, Pia Dijkstra plans to earmark “a substantial amount of money” for research into improving the treatment of health problems specific to women.

Ms Dijkstra was reacting to an earlier report by the Dutch Association of Gynaecologists and Obstetricians that highlighted the lack of attention to women-specific health problems, such as endometriosis, severe menstrual pain, menopausal complaints and pelvic floor problems.

She said there were 8.8 million women in the Netherlands, and sooner or later they would have to deal with health problems related to their sex — “without the proper knowledge we cannot treat them properly”.

It is not clear how much the Minister is setting aside for the research, but it is thought to be several million euros a year.

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Bureaucrats drafted for election training

SINGAPORE (March 9): The Singapore Government plans to draft in 50,000 Public Servants to manage its next General Election, not scheduled until November 2025.

The Elections Department (ELD) has already begun to single out key officials from the ranks of Government employees, with many saying they had been notified by email.

In a statement, the ELD said it appointed and trained public officers on an ongoing basis to perform election duties and to prepare the Public Service to conduct elections.

It did not respond to questions about the length of time between Public Servants being notified and an election being called.

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Photographers negative over passport plan

BRUSSELS (March 9): A plan to offer Belgian residents with free passport photographs in an effort to curb  identity fraud has run afoul of professional photographers who say it is a theft of their income.

Under the Live Enrolment project, spearheaded by the Federal Government, residents will no longer need to provide a passport photo when applying for identity cards or travel passes.

Instead, they can have their photos taken on the spot at the municipal counter, free of charge. This move aims to streamline the application process and enhance security measures against identity fraud.

However, photographer, Mieke Coppieters labelled the initiative as "robbery" and has launched an online petition emphasising the impact on photographers' livelihoods.

A regular update of Public Service news and events from around the world