Somali Military Says Offensive Retakes 20 Villages from Militants

Somalia’s military says an offensive in the central Hiran region has captured 20 villages that were occupied by the Islamist militant group al-Shabab.

A Somali National Army commander, Captain Mohamed Ibrahim Daud, told VOA by phone Monday that army troops backed by armed locals have killed more than 100 al-Shabab fighters and also “liberated” 20 villages from the al-Qaida-affiliated group.

He said the retaken villages include several key locations in Hiran region, including the small town of Fidow near Somalia’s border with Ethiopia.

Daud said troops captured another 20 militants alive.

He acknowledged that the army received air support during the operations, without naming a country.

In a statement issued Sunday night, Somali Information Ministry said the operations were the first step in implementing the government’s vision of fighting terrorism and getting rid of al-Shabab “all over the country.”

“The Somali government is committed to remove al-Shabab as a threat to the Somali people,” the statement said.

Abdulkarim Abdulle, a Mogadishu-based independent security analyst, told VOA via WhatsApp that local militias are determined to work with the security forces to eliminate al-Shabab in the regions.

He said the Macwisley — referring to local militia — is something that Somali government encouraged in the population, and they decided to liberate themselves from al-Shabab. Without them, Abdulle said, the operations could not succeed.

Al-Shabab did not comment on the government’s claims, but said it carried out a series of bomb attacks in the Hiran region targeting Somali security forces.


Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud declared a “total war” against al-Shabab in August 2022, after the group staged a deadly hotel siege in the capital Mogadishu that killed 21 people and wounded more than 100 others.

Source: Voice of America

Hitachi Energy to support major renewable electricity transmission between Canada and New York City

HVDC Light® transmission system will transfer renewable energy for over 1 million New York homes and help achieve the state’s climate goals

Zurich, Switzerland, Sept. 20, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Hitachi Energy, a global technology leader that is advancing a sustainable energy future for all, today announced it was selected by Transmission Developers Inc., a Blackstone portfolio company specialized in renewable power development, to supply a high-voltage direct current (HVDC) converter station that is a key part of the transmission solution for the Champlain Hudson Power Express (CHPE) HVDC interconnection between Québec, Canada and the New York City metro area, the United States.

The link will enable the delivery of clean, renewable hydropower between Canada and New York, contributing to New York’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), which aims for the state to be powered by 70 percent renewable energy by 2030.*1 CHPE is expected to decrease CO2 emissions by an average of 3.9 million metric tons per year, equivalent to removing 44 percent of passenger vehicles from New York City.*2

Using Hitachi Energy’s HVDC Light® technology, CHPE will transfer up to 1,250 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 1 million New York households. The link will efficiently transmit electricity for more than 600 kilometers (372 miles) underground from Hertel, Canada, through Lake Champlain and the Hudson River, to an HVDC converter station in Astoria, Queens.*1

HVDC systems have tremendous potential for bringing large amounts of electricity directly into cities, which is essential for securing sustainable and affordable power today and in the future,” said Niklas Persson, Managing Director of Hitachi Energy’s Grid Integration business. “We are proud to play a crucial role in this very important investment in North America’s transition to renewable energy and carbon neutrality.”

“Hitachi Energy’s market leading HVDC technology will ensure efficient and reliable transmission of renewable energy for over 1 million New York homes and help achieve the state’s climate goals,” said Transmission Developers CEO Donald Jessome. “We look forward to beginning construction activity later this year and to delivering an abundance of clean, renewable energy to New Yorkers.”

Power requirements in cities are increasing, especially in densely populated areas where land is already scarce, and difficulties can arise when new right-of-ways must be secured for traditional transmission lines. HVDC technology enables large amounts of high-quality electricity to be delivered where it is most needed with complete control and with a very compact footprint using out-of-sight underground or underwater cables.

The complete CHPE system, of which the HVDC converter stations are the enabling technology, is expected to create more than 1,400 jobs during construction and, during the first 30 years of operation, deliver almost $50 billion in economic benefits to New York state.*1

For the New York site, Hitachi Energy will supply the HVDC Light converter station, that will  convert the DC power from Canada to AC power and make it available for the AC grid in New York.

Kiewit, one of North America’s largest and most respected engineering and construction companies, will be responsible for the civil works for the converter station in New York. The collaboration with Kiewit will combine the core competencies of the two companies to deliver a best-in-class solution.

Note to editors:

Hitachi Energy’s HVDC solution combines world-leading expertise in HVDC converter valves; the MACH™ digital control platform*3, converter power transformers and high-voltage switchgear; as well as system studies, design and engineering, supply, installation supervision and commissioning.

HVDC Light® is a voltage source converter technology developed by Hitachi Energy. It is the preferred technology for many grid applications, including interconnecting countries, integrating renewables and “power-from-shore” connections to offshore production facilities. HVDC Light’s defining features include uniquely compact converter stations and exceptionally low electrical losses.

Hitachi Energy pioneered commercial HVDC technology almost 70 years ago and has delivered more than half of the world’s HVDC projects.

*1 Champlain Hudson Power Express

*2 May 2021 PA Analysis Report

*3 Modular Advanced Control for HVDC (MACH™)

HVDC website:

https://www.hitachienergy.com/offering/product-and-system/hvdc

– End –

About Hitachi Energy

Hitachi Energy is a global technology leader that is advancing a sustainable energy future for all. We serve customers in the utility, industry and infrastructure sectors with innovative solutions and services across the value chain. Together with customers and partners, we pioneer technologies and enable the digital transformation required to accelerate the energy transition towards a carbon-neutral future. We are advancing the world’s energy system to become more sustainable, flexible and secure whilst balancing social, environmental and economic value. Hitachi Energy has a proven track record and unparalleled installed base in more than 140 countries. Headquartered in Switzerland, we employ around 38,000 people in 90 countries and generate business volumes of approximately $10 billion USD.
https://www.hitachienergy.com
https://www.linkedin.com/company/hitachienergy
https://twitter.com/HitachiEnergy

About Hitachi, Ltd.

Hitachi drives Social Innovation Business, creating a sustainable society with data and technology. We will solve customers’ and society’s challenges with Lumada solutions leveraging IT, OT (Operational Technology) and products, under the business structure of Digital Systems & Services, Green Energy & Mobility, Connective Industries and Automotive Systems. Driven by green, digital, and innovation, we aim for growth through collaboration with our customers. The company’s consolidated revenues for fiscal year 2021 (ended March 31, 2022) totaled 10,264.6 billion yen ($84,136 million USD), with 853 consolidated subsidiaries and approximately 370,000 employees worldwide. For more information on Hitachi, please visit the company’s website at https://www.hitachi.com.

Attachments

Jocelyn Chang
Hitachi Energy Ltd.
+41 79384 7775
jocelyn.chang@hitachienergy.com

‫أول HUAWEI CONNECT خارج الصين: ابتكارات هواوي السحابية تذهب للعالمية

بانكوك، 20 سبتمبر 2022 / PRNewswire / — بدأت HUAWEI CONNECT 2022 في بانكوك، تايلاند اليوم. ألقى كين هو، الرئيس المناوب لهواوي، كلمة رئيسية، أطلق العنان الرقمي. أعلن تشانغ بينغان، الرئيس التنفيذي لشركة Huawei Cloud ، عن خطط لإطلاق مناطق جديدة في إندونيسيا وأيرلندا، وكشف النقاب عن خطة النظام البيئي “اذهب للسحابة، اذهب للعالمية”، وأكد من جديد الالتزام بكل شيء كخدمة. قالت جاكلين شي، رئيسة خدمة التسويق والمبيعات العالمية في Huawei Cloud ، إن Huawei Cloud ستطلق أكثر من 15 ابتكارًا على مستوى العالم، تغطي السحابة الأصلية، وتطوير الذكاء الاصطناعي، وحوكمة البيانات، والمحتوى الرقمي، وتطوير البرامج، و MacroVerse aPaaS .

Zhang Ping’an, CEO of Huawei Cloud

وفقًا لكين هو، يجب على المؤسسات احتضان السحابة لتطوير القفزة حيث أن التكنولوجيا الذكية الرقمية هي المستقبل. دمجت Huawei Cloud أكثر من 240 خدمة وأكثر من 50000 واجهة برمجة تطبيقات لجلب أحدث تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي وتطوير التطبيقات وتقنيات البيانات الضخمة وأدوات التطوير إلى السحابة. سيساعد الابتكار والخبرة في Huawei Cloud المزيد من المؤسسات على الانتقال إلى السحابة بشكل أسرع وأفضل.

تلتزم Huawei Cloud ببناء شبكة عالمية واحدة، والتي تسمح بالوصول إلى الخدمات على Huawei Cloud في غضون 50 مللي ثانية من أي مكان في العالم. لن تحتاج الشركات بعد الآن إلى إنشاء مراكز بيانات خاصة بها. ستطلق Huawei Cloud مناطق جديدة في إندونيسيا وأيرلندا. بحلول نهاية هذا العام، ستكون Huawei Cloud قد نشرت 29 منطقة و 75 منطقة توافر ( AZs ) تغطي أكثر من 170 دولة ومنطقة.

كما أصدر تشانغ بينغآن خطة “اذهب للسحابة، اذهب للعالمية”. مع التركيز على كل شيء كخدمة، ستشارك Huawei Cloud خبرتها المحلية المكتسبة في الخدمات لأكثر من 170 دولة ومنطقة، بالإضافة إلى نظرة ثاقبة على الشركات والصناعات في المناطق الرئيسية، وستساهم بتكنولوجياتها وحلولها في نظام بيئي عالمي. سيساعد هذا الجهد المزيد من الشركات على استخدام السحابة بشكل أفضل والانتقال إلى العالمية بشكل أكثر نجاحًا.

تلتزم سحابة هواوي بنهج “من قبل محلي، من أجل محلي” لبناء نظام بيئي رقمي عالمي. على مدى السنوات الثلاث المقبلة، ستقدم Huawei Cloud الدعم لما لا يقل عن 10000 شركة ناشئة واعدة في جميع أنحاء العالم، مع الدعم بما في ذلك تحسين التكلفة والدعم الفني والتدريب على ريادة الأعمال وموارد الأعمال الأخرى. انضم أكثر من 120 شركة في آسيا والمحيط الهادئ إلى برنامج Huawei Cloud Startup .

تعمل Huawei أيضًا على صقل المنصة الرائدة في الصناعة للابتكارات على السحابة. في خطابها، قدمت جاكلين شي 15 خدمة سحابية مبتكرة من Huawei ، بما في ذلك CCE Turbo و Ubiquitous Cloud Native Service (UCS) ونموذج موجة بانجو و DataArts LakeFormation و Virtual Live و CodeCheck و CloudTest و KooMessage و KooSearch و KooGallery .

بالنظر إلى المستقبل، ستستمر Huawei Cloud في تمكين الصناعات من خلال البنية التحتية كخدمة والتكنولوجيا كخدمة والخبرة كخدمة، لإطلاق العنان الرقمي مع كل شيء كخدمة وبناء الأساس السحابي لعالم ذكي.

الصورة –  https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1901281/Zhang_Ping_an_CEO_Huawei_Cloud.jpg

Distinguished Board Director and Former Fortune 100 CIO, Annabelle Bexiga Joins Quantexa Board of Directors

LONDON, Sept. 20, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Today Quantexa, a global leader in Decision Intelligence (DI) solutions for the public and private sectors, announced that Annabelle Bexiga is joining their board of directors. Annabelle is currently serving as the non-executive director for DWS Group, Stonex Group (SNEX), and Triton International (TRTN). Prior to her current roles, she served as the CIO Advisor at Zoom with a focus on working with their product development and marketing teams. She also established and chaired Zoom’s Financial Services Industry council.

Annabelle has 30 years of experience in the financial services industry and 11 years in Fortune-100 CIO roles. As a Board Director, Annabelle brings to Quantexa her operational knowledge, as well as public, private, and non-profit board leadership, and advisement experience.

This incredible journey of continuous learning from brilliant technologists and courageous leaders continues through my board and advisory work,” said Annabelle. “I am especially excited to join the board of Quantexa because they truly understand that today in the face of rapidly changing conditions, enterprises need to drive greater accuracy in decisions and innovation with data and analytics technology at the core. The Quantexa team are working to help organizations solve today’s major challenges in utilizing data effectively to improve their operations and the services they provide to their customers.”

“Annabelle’s background includes a diverse set of businesses at firms such as JPMorgan Chase, Zoom, and AIG, as well as residential global experience in New York, Singapore, Tokyo, and Boston,” said Vishal Marria, CEO at Quantexa. “Annabelle has made a fantastic contribution to Quantexa over the last 2 years working as an advisor to our business, so we are thrilled that she will be joining our board of directors. Her experience aligns well with our goals, our culture, and we look forward to incorporating her expertise to help our customers use their data at scale to unify their data, manage risk, ensure compliance, and identify opportunities for efficiency.”

ABOUT QUANTEXA
Quantexa is a global data and analytics software company pioneering Contextual Decision Intelligence that empowers organizations to make trusted operational decisions by making data meaningful. Using the latest advancements in big data and AI, Quantexa’s platform uncovers hidden risk and new opportunities by providing a contextual, connected view of internal and external data in a single place. It solves major challenges across data management, KYC, customer intelligence, financial crime, risk, fraud, and security, throughout the customer lifecycle.

The Quantexa Contextual Decision Intelligence Platform enhances operational performance with over 90% more accuracy and 60 times faster analytical model resolution than traditional approaches. Founded in 2016, Quantexa now has more than 500 employees and thousands of users working with billions of transactions and data points across the world. The company has offices in London, New York, Boston, Washington DC, Brussels, Toronto, Singapore, Melbourne, and Sydney. For more information, contact Quantexa here or follow us on LinkedIn.


Media Inquiries:

C: Laurel Case, VP, Fight or Flight

T: +1 315 663 6780

E: Quantexa@fightflight.co.uk


C: Adam Jaffe, SVP of Corporate Marketing
T: +1 609 502 6889
E: adamjaffe@quantexa.com
– or –
RapidResponse@quantexa.com

Guterres calls for ‘coalition of the world’ to overcome divisions, provide hope in place of turmoil

With people from all points of the globe crying out for relief and hope, international action on major challenges – from climate to conflict and securing sustainable development – is paralyzed by dysfunction and held hostage to geopolitical tensions, UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Tuesday.

Delivering a powerful address to world leaders gathered for the opening day of the General Assembly’s high-level debate, the Secretary-General said: “Our world is in big trouble. Divides are growing deeper; inequalities are growing wider; challenges are spreading father… we need hope… we need action across the board.”

With evocative images of the Brave Commander, one of the vessels that has been carrying tonnes of Ukrainian wheat bound for points in Ethiopia, Yemen and beyond, showing behind him on the walls of the iconic General Assembly Hall, Mr. Guterres said the ship, and the UN-brokered Black Sea Grain Initiative that had launched it were not symbols of conflict and hunger but of hope born of cooperation.

“It sailed the Black Sea with the UN flag flying high and proud.  At its essence, this ship is a symbol of what the world can accomplish when we act together. Ukraine and the Russian Federation – with the support of Türkiye – came together to make it happen – despite the enormous complexities, the naysayers, and even the hell of war. This is multilateral diplomacy in action. Each ship is also carrying one of today’s rarest commodities: Hope,” he stated.

A winter of our global discontent

Presenting his Annual Report on the Work of the Organization, the Secretary-General said soberingly: “Let’s have no illusions. We are in rough seas. A winter of global discontent is on the horizon. A cost-of-living crisis is raging. Trust is crumbling. Our planet is burning. People are hurting – with the most vulnerable suffering the most. The United Nations Charter and the ideals it represents are in jeopardy.”

And the while the international community had a duty to act, “we are gridlocked in colossal global dysfunction. The international community is not ready or willing to tackle the big dramatic challenges of our age. These crises threaten the very future of humanity and the fate of our planet.”

Along with the climate emergency and biodiversity loss, and the war in Ukraine, the UN chief said of crises like the dire financial situation of developing countries and the fate of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), “a forest of red flags across a host of new technologies”, rising hate speech and “out of control” digital surveillance, “we don’t have the beginning of a global architecture to deal with any of this.”

Indeed, he said, progress on all these issues and more is being held hostage to geopolitical tensions.

‘We cannot go on like this’

The Secretary-General lamented that our world is in peril and paralyzed by political divides that were undermining the work of the UN Security Council, international law, trust and people’s faith in democratic institutions, and all forms of international cooperation.

Geopolitical gridlock led to no cooperation; no dialogue and no collective problem solving. “But the reality is that we live in a world where the logic of cooperation and dialogue is the only path forward,” said Mr. Guterres, explaining that no power or group alone can call the shots. No major global challenge can be solved by a coalition of the willing. We need a coalition of the world.”

Such a coalition must overcome divisions and act together, starting with strengthening the core mission of the United Nations – achieving and sustaining peace.

With the world squarely focused on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, “which has unleashed widespread destruction with massive violations of human rights and international humanitarian law… We are seeing the threat of dangerous divisions between West and South. The risks to global peace and security are immense,” said the Secretary-General.

While calling for the world to keep working for peace in line with the UN Charter and international law, the UN chief warned that away from the glare of international media, other conflicts and humanitarian crises were spreading and the gap for funding the UN Global Humanitarian Appeal was the widest ever at some $32 billion.

Indeed, with unprecedented drought threatening the lives and livelihoods of 22 million people in the Horn of Africa, Afghanistan’s economy in ruins, cycles of violence in Israel and Palestine, appalling human rights violations in Myanmar, Mr. Guterres said “…and the list goes on… We need much more concerted action everywhere anchored in respect for international law and the protection of human rights.”

With all this in mind, he recalled that he had outlined elements of a new Agenda for Peace in his landmark report on Our Common Agenda. The United Nations would remain committed to make the most of every diplomatic tool for the pacific settlement of disputes; ensure the centrality of women’s leadership; prioritize prevention and peacebuilding and recognize human rights as pivotal for prevention.

‘Polluters must pay’

The Secretary-General went on to stress that another battle that must end is “our suicidal war against nature.” Calling the climate crisis the defining issue of our time, he said confronting it must be the first priority of every government and multilateral organization.

“And yet climate action is being put on the back burner – despite overwhelming public support around the world. Global greenhouse gas emissions need to be slashed by 45 per cent by 2030 to have any hope of reaching net zero by 2050,” he said, adding that emissions are going up at record levels – on course to a 14 per cent increase this decade.

“We have a rendezvous with climate disaster, he said, recalling his recent solidarity visit to flood-ravaged Pakistan, “where I saw with my own eyes…that one-third of the country is submerged by a monsoon on steroids.”

Planet Earth, Mr. Guterres said, is “a victim of scorched earth policies … and we ain’t seen nothing yet” because the hottest summers of today could be the coolest summers of tomorrow. Moreover, The G20 emits 80 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions.

“But the poorest and most vulnerable – those who contributed least to this crisis – are bearing its most brutal impacts. Meanwhile, the fossil fuel industry is feasting on hundreds of billions of dollars in subsidies and windfall profits while household budgets shrink and our planet burns.,” he stated.

The world is addicted to fossil fuels and it’s time for an intervention, declared the UN chief, stressing that: “We need to hold fossil fuel companies and their enablers to account,” from banks to private equity, and asset managers that continue to invest and underwrite carbon pollution.

“Fossil fuel interests need to spend less time averting a PR disaster – and more time averting a planetary one. Of course, fossil fuels cannot be shut down overnight. A just transition means leaving no person or country behind. But it is high time to put fossil fuel producers, investors and enablers on notice: Polluters must pay,” he said.

As such, he called on all developed economies to tax the windfall profits of fossil fuel companies. Those funds should be re-directed in two ways: to countries suffering loss and damage caused by the climate crisis; and to people struggling with rising food and energy prices.

SOS for the SDGs

With cascading crises are feeding on each other, compounding inequalities, creating devastating hardship, delaying the energy transition, and threatening global financial meltdown, the Secretary-General said: Social unrest is inevitable – with conflict not far behind.

“It doesn’t have to be this way. A world without extreme poverty, want or hunger is not an impossible dream. It is within reach. That is the world envisaged by the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals. But it is not the world we have chosen. Because of our decisions, sustainable development everywhere is at risk, he said.

With that in mind, he said the “SDGs are issuing an SOS” and called for the launch of an SDG Stimulus – led by the G-20 – to massively boost sustainable development for developing countries.

The upcoming G20 Summit in Bali is the place to start, he continued, and noted that his proposed SDG stimulus would have four components: increased funding from multilateral banks; debt relief; expansion of liquidity by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other major banks; and the empowerment by governments of specialized funds like Gavi, the Global Fund and the Green Climate Fund.

‘Fragile shoots of hope’

The Secretary-General said that while the divergence between developed and developing countries – between the privileged and the rest – was becoming more dangerous by the day and was the root of geopolitical tensions that were poisoning every area of global cooperation, “by acting as one, we can nurture fragile shoots of hope.”

He cited the hope found in climate and peace activists demanding better of their leaders, in women and girls leading the fight for basic human rights, in humanitarian heroes rushing to deliver lifesaving aid and said the UN stands with them all.

“So, let’s develop common solutions to common problems — grounded in goodwill, trust, and the rights shared by every human being. Let’s work as one, as a coalition of the world, as united nations,” he concluded.

Source: United Nations

Technical Cooperation Side Events at the 66th IAEA General Conference

The Department of Technical Cooperation (TC) will host, or co-organize with other IAEA departments, six side events during the 66th General Conference at the Agency’s Vienna headquarters from 26 to 30 September. In addition to these side events, national representatives to the TC programme’s four regional cooperative agreements will attend the annual meetings of AFRA, ARCAL, ARASIA and RCA, scheduled both in advance of and during the week of the General Conference. A meeting of National Liaison Officers from the Europe region will be held on 29 September.

Preview of side events

On the first day of the General Conference, experts participating in an ongoing regional project in Europe will demonstrate how they are applying nuclear technology to verify the authenticity and provenance of cultural heritage artefacts, food products and medicines. Revealing Secrets Using Nuclear Techniques, the first TC side event of the Conference, will take place on 26 September.

Despite playing a crucial role in sustaining the safe, high-quality use of radiation in diagnostic radiology, medical physicists are not always integrated into the work of diagnostic radiology departments. On 26 September, the side event, Diagnostic Radiology Medical Physicists: Who Are We? will showcase the role of these professionals in establishing, implementing and enhancing quality management systems, while highlighting available IAEA guidelines and tools.

ARASIA is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year and—alongside stakeholders, partners and invited guests—its Board of Representatives will celebrate the milestones and accomplishments made possible through the agreement in the last two decades. At the 20th Anniversary of ARASIA side event, a new website and a new publication highlighting the socio-developmental impact of ARASIA’s technical cooperation with the IAEA in the last two decades will be launched.

Through its NUTEC Plastics initiative, the IAEA is working with Member States to establish a network of marine plastic monitoring laboratories and plastic waste recycling pilot plants. On 28 September, the Nuclear Technology for Controlling Plastic Pollution (NUTEC Plastics) side event will showcase the growing monitoring network and its database, which will provide a science base for policy decisions.

The technical cooperation Programme Cycle Management Framework (PCMF) has come of age and needs an upgrade. On 28 September, the Plans for PCMF Upgrade event will provide an opportunity to present the PCMF upgrade project to Member States and highlight the need for extrabudgetary resources.

IAEA experts and African food and agriculture specialists will participate in a panel discussion exploring applications of nuclear technology in the ongoing fight against food insecurity in the region. On 29 September, the side event, Enhancing Capacities of Member States in Africa to Achieve Food Security Through the Peaceful Use of Nuclear Techniques, will also consider strategies to scale-up the use of nuclear techniques to protect soil and water resources and to economize crop production as part of a climate-smart approach to agriculture. 

Also on 29 September, Improving National Frameworks for Radiation Protection in Medical Exposure in Europe and Central Asia will present the status, challenges and common problems in the implementation of the requirements of the International Basic Safety Standards, GSR Part 3, based on analyses of national legislation for medical exposure and self-assessment of Member States in Europe and Central Asia.

Exhibition

Alongside other IAEA departments and specialized programmes, the Department of Technical Cooperation will host an exhibition throughout the weeklong conference. The exhibit will showcase how the technical cooperation programme functions and the impact it helps to achieve.

Conference attendees are invited to visit the booth in the M building of the Vienna International Centre to pick up copies of the latest materials and publications, to view new videos and to meet IAEA staff at ‘Meet the Expert’ sessions. Using the hashtag #IAEATC, visitors are encouraged to publish photos of their visit to the exhibition on Twitter.

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency