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The Pastry A.I. That Learned to Fight Cancer – The New Yorker

One morning in the spring of 2019, I entered a pastry shop in the Ueno train station, in Tokyo. The shop worked cafeteria-style. After taking a tray and tongs at the front, you browsed, plucking what you liked from heaps of baked goods. What first struck me was the selection, which seemed endless: there were croissants, turnovers, Danishes, pies, cakes, and open-faced sandwiches piled up everywhere, sometimes in dozens of varieties. But I was most surprised when I got to the register. At the urging of an attendant, I slid my items onto a glowing rectangle on the counter. A nearby screen displayed an image, shot from above, of my doughnuts and Danish. I watched as a set of jagged, neon-green squiggles appeared around each item, accompanied by its name in Japanese and a price. The system had apparently recognized my pastries by sight. It calculated what I owed, and I paid.

I tried to gather myself while the attendant wrapped and bagged my items. I was still stunned when I got outside. The bakery system had the flavor of magica feat seemingly beyond the possible, made to look inevitable. I had often imagined that, someday, Id be able to point my smartphone camera at a peculiar flower and have it identified, or at a chess board, to study the position. Eventually, the tech would get to the point where one could do such things routinely. Now it appeared that we were in this world already, and that the frontier was pastry.

Computers learned to see only recently. For decades, image recognition was one of the grand challenges in artificial intelligence. As I write this, I can look up at my shelves: they contain books, and a skein of yarn, and a tangled cable, all inside a cabinet whose glass enclosure is reflecting leaves in the trees outside my window. I cant help but parse this sceneabout a third of the neurons in my cerebral cortex are implicated in processing visual information. But, to a computer, its a mess of color and brightness and shadow. A computer has never untangled a cable, doesnt get that glass is reflective, doesnt know that trees sway in the wind. A.I. researchers used to think that, without some kind of model of how the world worked and all that was in it, a computer might never be able to distinguish the parts of complex scenes. The field of computer vision was a zoo of algorithms that made do in the meantime. The prospect of seeing like a human was a distant dream.

All this changed in 2012, when Alex Krizhevsky, a graduate student in computer science, released AlexNet, a program that approached image recognition using a technique called deep learning. AlexNet was a neural network, deep because its simulated neurons were arranged in many layers. As the network was shown new images, it guessed what was in them; inevitably, it was wrong, but after each guess it was made to adjust the connections between its layers of neurons, until it learned to output a label matching the one that researchers provided. (Eventually, the interior layers of such networks can come to resemble the human visual cortex: early layers detect simple features, like edges, while later layers perform more complex tasks, such as picking out shapes.) Deep learning had been around for years, but was thought impractical. AlexNet showed that the technique could be used to solve real-world problems, while still running quickly on cheap computers. Today, virtually every A.I. system youve heard ofSiri, AlphaGo, Google Translatedepends on the technique.

The drawback of deep learning is that it requires large amounts of specialized data. A deep-learning system for recognizing faces might have to be trained on tens of thousands of portraits, and it wont recognize a dress unless its also been shown thousands of dresses. Deep-learning researchers, therefore, have learned to collect and label data on an industrial scale. In recent years, weve all joined in the effort: todays facial recognition is particularly good because people tag themselves in pictures that they upload to social networks. Google asks users to label objects that its A.I.s are still learning to identify: thats what youre doing when you take those Are you a bot? tests, in which you select all the squares containing bridges, crosswalks, or streetlights. Even so, there are blind spots. Self-driving cars have been known to struggle with unusual signage, such as the blue stop signs found in Hawaii, or signs obscured by dirt or trees. In 2017, a group of computer scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, pointed out that, on the Internet, almost all the images tagged as bedrooms are clearly staged and depict a made bed from 2-3 meters away. As a result, networks have trouble recognizing real bedrooms.

Its possible to fill in these blind spots through focussed effort. A few years ago, I interviewed for a job at a company that was using deep learning to read X-rays, starting with bone fractures. The programmers asked surgeons and radiologists from some of the best hospitals in the U.S. to label a library of images. (The job I interviewed for wouldnt have involved the deep-learning system; instead, Id help improve the Microsoft Paint-like program that the doctors used for labelling.) In Tokyo, outside the bakery, I wondered whether the pastry recognizer could possibly be relying on a similar effort. But it was hard to imagine a team of bakers assiduously photographing and labelling each batch as it came out of the oven, tens of thousands of times, for all the varieties on offer. My partner suggested that the bakery might be working with templates, such that every pain au chocolat would have precisely the same shape. An alternative suggested by the machines retro graphicsbut perplexing, given the systems uncanny performancewas that it wasnt using deep learning. Maybe someone had gone down the old road of computer vision. Maybe, by really considering what pastry looked like, they had taught their software to see it.

Hisashi Kambe, the man behind the pastry A.I., grew up in Nishiwaki City, a small town that sits at Japans geographic center. The city calls itself Japans navel; surrounded by mountains and rice fields, its best known for airy, yarn-dyed cotton fabrics woven in intricate patterns, which have been made there since the eighteenth century. As a teen-ager, Kambe planned to take over his fathers lumber business, which supplied wood to homes built in the traditional style. But he went to college in Tokyo and, after graduating, in 1974, took a job in Osaka at Matsushita Electric Works, which later became Panasonic. There, he managed the companys relationship with I.B.M. Finding himself in over his head, he took computer classes at night and fell in love with the machines.

In his late twenties, Kambe came home to Nishiwaki, splitting his time between the lumber mill and a local job-training center, where he taught computer classes. Interest in computers was soaring, and he spent more and more time at the school; meanwhile, more houses in the area were being built in a Western style, and traditional carpentry was in decline. Kambe decided to forego the family business. Instead, in 1982, he started a small software company. In taking on projects, he followed his own curiosity. In 1983, he began working with NHK, one of Japans largest broadcasters. Kambe, his wife, and two other programmers developed a graphics system for displaying the score during baseball games and exchange rates on the nightly news. In 1984, Kambe took on a problem of special significance in Nishiwaki. Textiles were often woven on looms controlled by planning programs; the programs, written on printed cards, looked like sheet music. A small mistake on a planning card could produce fabric with a wildly incorrect pattern. So Kambe developed SUPER TEX-SIM, a program that allowed textile manufacturers to simulate the design process, with interactive yarn and color editors. It sold poorly until 1985, a series of breaks led to a distribution deal with Mitsubishis fabric division. Kambe formally incorporated as BRAIN Co., Ltd.

For twenty years, BRAIN took on projects that revolved, in various ways, around seeing. The company made a system for rendering kanji characters on personal computers, a tool that helped engineers design bridges, systems for onscreen graphics, and more textile simulators. Then, in 2007, BRAIN was approached by a restaurant chain that had decided to spin off a line of bakeries. Bread had always been an import in Japanthe Japanese word for it, pan, comes from Portugueseand the countrys rich history of trade had left consumers with ecumenical tastes. Unlike French boulangeries, which might stake their reputations on a handful of staples, its bakeries emphasized range. (In Japan, even Kit Kats come in more than three hundred flavors, including yogurt sake and cheesecake.) New kinds of baked goods were being invented all the time: the carbonara, for instance, takes the Italian pasta dish and turns it into a kind of breakfast sandwich, with a piece of bacon, slathered in egg, cheese, and pepper, baked open-faced atop a roll; the ham corn pulls a similar trick, but uses a mixture of corn and mayo for its topping. Every kind of baked good was an opportunity for innovation.

Analysts at the new bakery venture conducted market research. They found that a bakery sold more the more varieties it offered; a bakery offering a hundred items sold almost twice as much as one selling thirty. They also discovered that naked pastries, sitting in open baskets, sold three times as well as pastries that were individually wrapped, because they appeared fresher. These two facts conspired to create a crisis: with hundreds of pastry types, but no wrappersand, therefore, no bar codesnew cashiers had to spend months memorizing what each variety looked like, and its price. The checkout process was difficult and error-pronethe cashier would fumble at the register, handling each item individuallyand also unsanitary and slow. Lines in pastry shops grew longer and longer. The restaurant chain turned to BRAIN for help. Could they automate the checkout process?

AlexNet was five years in the future; even if Kambe and his team could have photographed thousands of pastries, they couldnt have pulled a neural network off the shelf. Instead, the state of the art in computer vision involved piecing together a pipeline of algorithms, each charged with a specific task. Suppose that you wanted to build a pedestrian-recognition system. Youd start with an algorithm that massaged the brightness and colors in your image, so that you werent stymied by someones red shirt. Next, you might add algorithms that identified regions of interest, perhaps by noticing the zebra pattern of a crosswalk. Only then could you begin analyzing image featurespatterns of gradients and contrasts that could help you pick out the distinctive curve of someones shoulders, or the A made by a torso and legs. At each stage, you could choose from dozens if not hundreds of algorithms, and ways of combining them.

For the BRAIN team, progress was hard-won. They started by trying to get the cleanest picture possible. A document outlining the companys early R. & D. efforts contains a triptych of pastries: a carbonara sandwich, a ham corn, and a minced potato. This trio of lookalikes was one of the systems early nemeses: As you see, the text below the photograph reads, the bread is basically brown and round. The engineers confronted two categories of problem. The first they called similarity among different kinds: a bacon pain dpi, for instancea sort of braided baguette with bacon insidehas a complicated knotted structure that makes it easy to mistake for sweet-potato bread. The second was difference among same kinds: even a croissant came in many shapes and sizes, depending on how you baked it; a cream doughnut didnt look the same once its powdered sugar had melted.

In 2008, the financial crisis dried up BRAINs other business. Kambe was alarmed to realize that he had bet his company, which was having to make layoffs, on the pastry project. The situation lent the team a kind of maniacal focus. The company developed ten BakeryScan prototypes in two years, with new image preprocessors and classifiers. They tried out different cameras and light bulbs. By combining and rewriting numberless algorithms, they managed to build a system with ninety-eight per cent accuracy across fifty varieties of bread. (At the office, they were nothing if not well fed.) But this was all under carefully controlled conditions. In a real bakery, the lighting changes constantly, and BRAINs software had to work no matter the season or the time of day. Items would often be placed on the device haphazardly: two pastries that touched looked like one big pastry. A subsystem was developed to handle this scenario. Another subsystem, called Magnet, was made to address the opposite problem of a pastry that had been accidentally ripped apart.

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The Pastry A.I. That Learned to Fight Cancer - The New Yorker

European Union and Council of Europe to further strengthen co-operation with authorities in North Macedonia towards consolidation of human rights…

Skopje, 22 March 2021 - The joint European Union and Council of Europe programme Horizontal Facility for the Western Balkans and Turkey 2019-2022 has been a valuable support to North Macedonia in particular to further strengthen fundamental freedom and human rights of citizens, concluded the participants of the Second Beneficiary Steering Committee Meeting taking place online today in Skopje. The programme will continue assisting authorities to comply with European standards in the field of human rights, rule of law and democracy.

During the meeting partner and beneficiary institutions took stock of the Horizontal Facility II key achievements, welcoming the flexibility of the programme to tackle key challenges during implementation, in particular in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In her address, Deputy Director, Horizontal Facility Beneficiary Co-ordinator - Ministry of Foreign Affairs of North Macedonia, Gorica Atanasova Gjorevska expressed her appreciation and support for the dedicated implementation of the objectives of the Joint Programme of the European Union/Council of Europe - Horizontal Facility II, stressing the active involvement of the beneficiary institutions and stakeholders in the continuous realisation of the projects, in these very difficult conditions and pandemic environment. The Annual Steering Committee is yet another opportunity for all of us to assess the progress made, as well as to discern the areas in which my country needs further assistance in the domestic reform processes while remaining dedicated to the European agenda" said Atanasova Gjorevska.

In his remarks, the Head of Cooperation in the Delegation of the European Union to the Republic of North Macedonia, Nicola Bertolini stressed that: With our joint and continuous efforts in the framework of the European Union and Council of Europe Horizontal Facility initiative, we have managed to develop strong partnership, trust and we have delivered numerous positive results in the field of human rights, rule of law, that contribute to the overall reform processes in North Macedonia and the whole region.

The Head of Programming Department in the Council of Europe Office of the Directorate General of Programmes, Pilar Morales, underlined that: The Council of Europe, hand in hand with the European Union and the domestic partners, remains now more than ever, in this particular challenging context, committed to support North Macedonia to forge ahead with its reform agenda and advance on its EU path and compliance with Council of Europe standards.

With a dedicated budget of over 4.1 million, the EU and Council of Europe joint Horizontal Facility II programme is currently implementing six major actions in North Macedonia. Through the technical assistance, these actions are supporting the needs of the public authorities in addressing important reforms to ensure justice, fight corruption and organised crime, promote diversity and equality and to advance freedom of media and freedom of expression, within the framework of the EU enlargement process.

The Horizontal Facility II joint programme was created as a co-operation initiative of the European Union and Council of Europe to assist Beneficiaries in the Western Balkans and Turkey to comply with Council of Europe standards and, where relevant, the European Union acquis in the framework of the enlargement process.

Despite the effect that COVID-19 pandemic had on the implementation of the actions under the Horizontal Facility II in North Macedonia, notable results were achieved during its second year of implementation.

In the field of ensuring justice and equal rights with the support of the programme, the provision of free legal aid services for the citizens of North Macedonia has been consolidated. This framework an informational and awareness raising campaign promoting better access and more efficient free legal aid services for the citizens of North Macedonia has been conducted in close co-operation with the Ministry of Justice.

In the efforts to guarantee prisoners rights, the consolidation of External Oversight Mechanism and the awareness raising initiative to promote this mechanism have contributed to a better protection against the violations perpetrated by prisons police. Furthermore, in co-operation with the Directorate for the Execution of Sanctions important progress has been identified towards addressing violent extremism and radicalisation in prisons.

To support the authorities in the fight against corruption and economic crime, key contribution has been provided in the effective implementation of the EU Directive and the Council of Europe Recommendation on whistle-blowers. In addition, consultations and guidance was provided to the authorities in the process of reviewing the draft amendments to Anti Money Laundry/Combatting the Financing of Terrorism Law, and related Strategy. Starting from this year, with the support of the programme a training centre within the State Commission for Prevention of Corruption of North Macedonia is being established, which will provide capacity building and knowledge tools in the framework of fighting corruption and economic crime.

Referring to the efforts in fighting discrimination and promoting diversity, assistance was provided to the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy in the process of integrating key standards and recommendations from the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI), in the country reforms and policies to counter discrimination. Furthermore, key raising awareness initiatives have been introduced in various communities in North Macedonia to promote protection of rights of LGBTI persons, and fight hate speech.Focusing on the work to combat human trafficking in North Macedonia, the programme has provided important contribution in the process of improving the identification, protection of, and assistance to victims of human trafficking for the purpose of labour exploitation, with a particular attention on children. During this period, support was given to the authorities in the process of ensuring effective legal aid and representation for the victims of domestic violence, while working together with civil society organisations to promote and raise awareness on the dangers of human trafficking for various vulnerable communities.

In the field of freedom of expression, key assistance was provided in promoting freedom of expression and freedom of the media in North Macedonia helping key actors in their endeavours to improve the application of European standards related to freedom of speech. Important consultations and expertise on the amendments to the Criminal Code of North Macedonia to ensure more safety for journalists, were conducted in co-operation with the Public Prosecutor's Office and the Ministry of Justice. In addition, capacity building activities and knowledge tools have been shared with the community of legal professionals in North Macedonia aiming to improve the application of the European Convention on Human Rights and the Court case-law on freedom of expression in North Macedonia.

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European Union and Council of Europe to further strengthen co-operation with authorities in North Macedonia towards consolidation of human rights...

IAEA Director General Highlights Global Impact of Cooperation with European Union, Calls for Closer Partnership | IAEA – International Atomic Energy…

At the European Parliament this morning, IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi emphasized the importance of the European Union as a major partner and supporter of the IAEA, especially in the area of safeguards, security and safety. During his exchange with MEPs, he called for even closer cooperation to address global challenges related to non-proliferation, climate change and sustainable development worldwide. Mr Grossi spoke through video link during ajoint hybrid session of the Subcommittee on Security and Defence (SEDE), the Committee on Foreign Affairs (AFET) and the Committee for Industry, Research and Energy (ITRE) the first time for an IAEA Director General to speak at the European Parliament.

The IAEA is a vehicle through which the European Union can achieve its Agenda for a Renewed Multilateralism and fulfil its Agenda 2030, Mr Grossi stated. I believe that your noble objectives of: strengthening global recovery and tackling inequalities; of winning the race against climate change and restoring our relationship with nature; and of building partnerships and alliances will be easier to achieve when you work with, and support, the IAEA, Mr Grossi stated in the virtual exchange.

Since 2008, the EU has contributed approximately 140 million, including 10.8 million in 2020, in extrabudgetary funds to the IAEA. The contributions have been pivotal in supporting projects in nuclear safety and security, as well as technical cooperation, to ensure all nations benefit from the peaceful uses of nuclear technology.

Mr Grossi highlighted the scope of the Agencys work and its relevance to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Nuclear techniques and technologies help countries protect their crops, protect their health through nuclear medicine all over the world, he said. Furthermore, the IAEA is an indispensable player when it comes to fighting, for example, plastic pollution through isotopic tracers.

In light of the pandemic, the IAEA launched ZODIAC, a major initiative to preventfuture outbreaks of diseases that spread from animals to humans. By using nuclear-derived technologies to detect viruses and antibodies in animals and humans, we will build up the defences of countries at the forefront of these outbreaks, Mr Grossi stated. It will be nuclears contribution to reducing the chance that the world falls victim again to a devastating pandemic like COVID-19. We see many EU Member States increasing their contributions to our activities in the area of nuclear applications.

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IAEA Director General Highlights Global Impact of Cooperation with European Union, Calls for Closer Partnership | IAEA - International Atomic Energy...

Joint press release following the 6th Association council meeting between the European Union and Georgia – EU News

The European Union and Georgia held the 6th meeting of the Association council on 16 March 2021. The Association council took note of the 2021 Association Implementation Report on Georgia and assessed the state of EU-Georgia relations since the last Association council in March 2019.

The sides reaffirmed their continued and joint commitment to Georgia's deeper political association and economic integration with the EU in the framework of the Association Agreement and its Deep and Comprehensive Free trade Area (DCFTA). The Association council welcomed the quality and frequency of ongoing high-level dialogue and noted the importance of active follow up on its results. Both sides acknowledged Georgias European aspirations, its European choice and the common objective of continuing to build a democratic, stable and prosperous country. The Association council welcomed ongoing negotiations on the Association Agenda for 2021-2027 to set priorities for the implementation of the AA/DCFTA. Georgia outlined its plans to further advance on its European integration path by 2024.

The Association council welcomed Georgias progress on its European path, including in the challenging COVID-19 context, and recognised the efforts of the Georgian Government to contain the virus as well as to ensure targeted social assistance to those in need. Both sides acknowledged the crucial importance of the EU rapid assistance to Georgia in the fight against COVID as a vivid sign of solidarity.

Both sides reaffirmed their continued commitment to bringing tangible benefits to the lives of Georgian citizens across key areas of cooperation: economic development and market opportunities; strengthening institutions and good governance; connectivity, energy efficiency, environment and climate change; enhancing mobility and people-to-people contacts.

The Association council noted that the elections of 31 October and 21 November 2020 were competitive and that, overall, fundamental freedoms were respected. The Association council agreed on the importance of addressing all recommendations related to the shortcomings identified by international observers, including OSCE/ODIHR, through ambitious and inclusive electoral reform in order to strengthen the electoral environment and render it more favourable for the democratic conduct of elections.

The Association council strongly regretted the deepening political polarisation in Georgia. The EU called for a swift resolution to the ongoing political situation, for all parties to step up efforts to de-escalate the situation and come together to identify and agree on common ground. The Association council agreed that it was vital for all actors to continue working, in the EU-supported mediation, to find an early resolution to Georgias political crisis.

The Association council reiterated its call on all political actors to work together and to maintain open dialogue in Georgia, including with civil society, in order to further strengthen democratic institutions, consolidate pluralistic democracy and advance reforms. Both sides stressed the need to continue the successful cooperation between the EU and Georgia on strategic communication and countering disinformation.

The Association council welcomed the progress made to date by Georgia in the implementation of reforms in the rule of law and the penitentiary system. The Council also agreed that there are a number of areas where further progress was needed, including by strengthening the independence and accountability of the judiciary and bringing the appointment process for Supreme Court judges in line with European standards.The EU underlined its commitment to continue assisting Georgia in reform of the judiciary and in strengthening the rule of law.

The Association council recalled that a great number of Georgian citizens have benefited from short term visa free travel to Schengen countries in recent years. It welcomed the continuous efforts of Georgia to address violations of the visa-free travel requirements, including the latest legislative amendments to the Law of Georgia on Rules for Georgian citizens on Leaving and Entering Georgia and underlined the importance of its effective implementation. The Association council underlined the critical importance of sustained efforts by Georgia to continue to fulfil the visa liberalisation benchmarks, in particular in order to strengthen and maintain the recent decrease in the number of unfounded asylum applications lodged by Georgian nationals in the Schengen + area. The EU encouraged Georgia to further enhance cooperation with EU Member States to counter irregular migration and organised crime. Both sides welcomed a renewed working arrangement signed between Georgia and Frontex, as well as Georgia's acquisition of observer status in the European Migration Network.

The Association council welcomed progress made in the implementation of Georgia's Human Rights Strategy and its Action Plan, as well as the important work of the Human Rights Protection Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. The EU recognised Georgias efforts in this area and encouraged Georgia to continue efforts to effectively implement the anti-discrimination law and to ensure protection for all persons belonging to minorities, and to ensure gender equality. The Council recalled the commitment to the universality of human rights for all, regardless of religion or belief, race, ethnic origin, sex, language, sexual orientation, gender identity, ability or other. The Association council welcomed substantial progress made by Georgia to create an effective labour inspection system, in order to further improve working conditions and address the challenges in this area in line with international and European labour standards. It also discussed the importance of continuing efforts in this direction.

Both sides welcomed the progress made by Georgia in the implementation of the Association Agreement, including its Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (DCFTA). The EU continued to be the most important trading partner of Georgia. The EU and Georgia agreed to identify further products with export potential to the EU, for which EU can provide assistance. Both sides welcomed successful implementation of structural reforms and underlined the importance of ongoing reforms related to the improvement of the investment climate in Georgia. The Association council welcomed the ongoing work to draft a new SME Development Strategy 2021-2025 and the EU side confirmed its readiness to support its implementation.

The Association council welcomed the disbursements of Macro-Financial Assistance to Georgia in November 2020 and urged Georgia to continue the implementation of outstanding agreed policy measures in order to enable the disbursement of the second instalment of COVID Macro-Financial Assistance to Georgia (of which 75 million EUR was disbursed in 2020). The EU encouraged Georgia to ensure the sustainability of already implemented reforms and maintain macro-economic stability.

The Association council reiterated Georgia's strategic role in the field of energy, transport and connectivity and increasingly as a transportation and logistics hub in the region. The EU committed to continue engaging closely with Georgia on the connectivity agenda, including through the gradual completion of the indicative core Trans-European networks of Transport (TEN-T), as a step towards enhancing connectivity and international trade between Europe and Asia. The sides also highlighted the importance of Black Sea connectivity. The EU took note of Georgias request for support in the elaboration and implementation of a plan for better Black Sea connectivity.

The Association council reiterated Georgia's key role as a partner for European energy security and stressed the country's transit role for Caspian hydrocarbon resources to reach European markets, notably via the Southern Gas Corridor and through the Black Sea, with a view to strengthening EU-Georgia interconnections. The EU stressed its continued commitment to further supporting the roll-out of energy efficiency standards in public buildings, based on legislative reforms in key areas. The EU reiterated its continuous support to reinvigorating Georgias agriculture and rural sector to improve living conditions in rural areas. The Association council noted the importance of enhanced cooperation in the area of civil protection.

The EU recognised Georgia as a key partner in the region and acknowledged the importance of EU-Georgia cooperation in the field of foreign and security policy. The Association council recalled the issues discussed during the third EU-Georgia Strategic Security Dialogue in October 2019 and looked forward to the next meeting in this format. The EU expressed appreciation for Georgia's continued contribution to EU-led crisis management operations and missions in the Central African Republic and the Republic of Mali, as well as openness to supporting the strengthening of Georgias capacities and resilience.

The EU reiterated its firm support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Georgia within its internationally recognised borders. The EU reiterated its firm commitment to peaceful conflict resolution in Georgia by using all instruments at its disposal including the policy of non-recognition and engagement. The work of the EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in Georgia and of the EU Monitoring Mission demonstrate this strong commitment.

The Association council took note of the judgement of 21 January 2021 of the European Court of Human Rights Grand Chamber in the inter-State case concerning the armed conflict between Georgia and the Russian Federation in August 2008 and its consequences which concluded that after the 12 August 2008 the Russian Federation, exercising effective control over Abkhazia and South Ossetia, violated several provisions of the European Convention of Human Rights.

The Association council stressed the critical importance of the Geneva International Discussions for addressing and resolving the challenges stemming from the conflict between Russia and Georgia in August 2008. It also reiterated that full and effective Incident Prevention and Response Mechanisms (IPRMs) are essential for addressing the safety and humanitarian needs of conflict-affected population on the ground. In this regard, the Council welcomed the resumption of Ergneti IPRM meetings and emphasised the crucial importance of resuming the Gali IPRM.

The Council expressed concern about signing a so-called programme on the creation of a common socio-economic space between Russia and Georgian region of Abkhazia as well as other steps further undermining Georgias sovereignty and territorial integrity, deterioration of the security and human rights situation in the Georgian regions of Abkhazia and Tskhinvali/South Ossetia, especially with regard to intensified military build-up, installation of barbed wire fences and other artificial barriers along the dividing lines, long-term closure of crossing points. Concerns also include the situation with ethnic discrimination of Georgians, restriction of freedom of movement, including for health care and access to other social services, arbitrary detentions, violation of property rights and education in mother tongue, the persistent obstacles to the safe and dignified return of internally displaced persons and refugees to their places of origin, and deprivation of life of Archil Tatunashvili and Giga Otkhozoria. In this regard, the Association council reiterated that justice should be applied.

The Association council reiterated the obligation for the Russian Federation to fulfil its international obligations including under the EU-mediated 12 August 2008 Ceasefire Agreement, notably to withdraw its military forces from the territory of Georgia and remove all impediments for establishment of international security mechanisms therein. The Association council further urged the Russian Federation to provide EUMM access to the whole territory of Georgia, in line with its mandate. The Association council also called for access for international humanitarian and human rights mechanisms of relevant international organisations.

The Association council stressed the importance of ongoing support to people-to-people contacts and confidence building measures across the divides. In this respect, the Association council recalled its support for the Georgian peace initiative A Step to a Better Future .

The EU commended Georgia's active participation in the multilateral dimension of the Eastern Partnership and underlined that continued reform efforts in the partner countries are key to the success of the Eastern Partnership and to the EaP Summit scheduled for later this year.

The Association council was chaired by the High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Mr Josep Borrell. The Prime Minister of Georgia, Mr. Irakli Garibashvili led the Georgian delegation.

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Joint press release following the 6th Association council meeting between the European Union and Georgia - EU News

European Union joins hands with India-led Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure – AKIpress

European Union joins hands with India-led Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure

AKIPRESS.COM - Accepting Indias invitation, the 27-member European Union (EU) has officially on-boarded as a member of the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI), following its endorsement of the charter of the CDRI earlier, the EU Delegation to India and Bhutan said.

Launched in 2019 by Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi at the UN Climate Change Summit, the CDRI is an international collaborative platform involving the public and private sector, aiming to promote the resilience of new and existing infrastructure systems to climate and disaster risks in support of sustainable development.

Prime Minister Modi had addressed the International Conference on Disaster Resilient Infrastructure through video conference on March 17 and said the importance of the CDRI is "more evident" than ever. He had called for sustained and concentrated efforts to mitigate climate change.

Climate-related extreme events are increasing globally, and the COVID-19 pandemic has further reinforced the need for robust disaster preparedness and investment in renewable energy, green infrastructure, energy and resource efficiency, large-scale retrofitting, renovation projects and the circular economy.

The CDRI is a welcome initiative to help tackle these objectives in a multilateral approach, which will help implementation of the Paris Agreement, through both global reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and enhanced climate change adaptation action.

Commenting on the development, Ambassador of the European Union to India Ugo Astuto said, We are happy to join CDRI, an initiative fully aligned with the objectives of the European Green Deal and of the recently adopted EU Strategy on Adaptation. We wish to make adaptation smarter, swifter, more systemic and to step up international action. We look forward to exploring synergies and combining forces with CDRI in this respect. He added, We welcome the international leadership that India has taken on disaster resilience. Increased resilience, including development of sustainable and resilient infrastructure is also a key priority under the EU-India strategic partnership.

Welcoming the endorsement of the CDRI Charter by the European Union, Director General, CDRI, Sandeep Poundrik said, We are indeed delighted to welcome the European Union as the newest member of the Coalition. This is a clear expression of the commitment of the EU towards collaborative efforts for creating a more resilient and sustainable world. Climate and disaster risks have cascading impacts that are complex, multi-dimensional and transboundary in nature. Our response, therefore, also needs to be comprehensive, multifaceted and unified. We will work with the EU for making available highly specialised knowledge and expertise on resilient infrastructure planning and implementation.

The EU is already exploring how to maximise synergies in its work with the CDRI in its forthcoming project on enhancing climate-smart infrastructure in South Asia. Leveraging tools in research and innovation, like the EUs Copernicus space data instrument, and trilateral cooperation in Small Island Developing States (SIDS), are also potential fields of collaboration between the EU and CDRI.

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European Union joins hands with India-led Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure - AKIpress