黑料社区

Trump says journalist Austin Tice has not been seen in many years

US officials pressed for Tice鈥檚 release after the government fell. Former President Joe Biden said at the time he believed Tice was alive. (REUTERS/File)
US officials pressed for Tice鈥檚 release after the government fell. Former President Joe Biden said at the time he believed Tice was alive. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 16 May 2025

Trump says journalist Austin Tice has not been seen in many years

Trump says journalist Austin Tice has not been seen in many years
  • The US journalist was abducted in Syria in 2012 while reporting in Damascus on the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE: US President Donald Trump said on Friday that American journalist Austin Tice, captured in Syria more than 12 years ago, has not been seen in years.
Trump was asked if he brought up Tice when he met with Syria鈥檚 new President Ahmed Al-Sharaa during a visit to 黑料社区 on Wednesday.
鈥淚 always talk about Austin Tice. Now you know Austin Tice hasn鈥檛 been seen in many, many years,鈥 Trump replied. 鈥淗e鈥檚 got a great mother who鈥檚 just working so hard to find her boy. So I understand it, but Austin has not been seen in many, many years.鈥
Tice, a former US Marine and a freelance journalist, was 31 when he was abducted in August 2012 while reporting in Damascus on the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad, who was ousted by Syrian rebels who seized the capital Damascus in December. Syria had denied he was being held.
US officials pressed for Tice鈥檚 release after the government fell. Former President Joe Biden said at the time he believed Tice was alive.


Protestors persist in demanding Microsoft cut all ties to Israel, despite Azure military restrictions

Protestors persist in demanding Microsoft cut all ties to Israel, despite Azure military restrictions
Updated 48 sec ago

Protestors persist in demanding Microsoft cut all ties to Israel, despite Azure military restrictions

Protestors persist in demanding Microsoft cut all ties to Israel, despite Azure military restrictions
  • Protestors displayed banners at company HQ, accusing tech giant of 鈥榠nsufficient half-measures鈥櫬
  • Microsoft halted access to some Azure cloud and AI services for a key Israeli military unit after expose revealed its technology was used in surveillance system collecting data on Palestinians

LONDON: Microsoft workers and activists are continuing to demand that the tech giant cut all ties with Israel, even after the company halted access to some Azure cloud and artificial intelligence services for a key Israeli military unit.

On Thursday, protesters unfurled banners at Microsoft鈥檚 headquarters in Redmond, Washington, one reading 鈥淢ICROSOFT BUILD KILLS,鈥 adorned with images of warplanes and missiles dropping from the Azure cloud logo.

The demonstration followed news that Microsoft had ended Israeli military Unit 8200鈥檚 access to certain Azure services, after reports that its technology was used in a surveillance system collecting millions of Palestinian phone calls in Gaza and the West Bank.

The campaign, led by current and former Microsoft employees under the banner 鈥淣o Azure for Apartheid,鈥 says these steps do not go far enough.

鈥淓ven after announcing the Unit 8200 cut, why does Microsoft continue to shut down the conversation? It鈥檚 the only way they can continue to get away with their half-measure,鈥 said Scott Suftin-Glowski, a former Microsoft worker who resigned in protest, accusing the company of 鈥渃ontinued complicity in genocide.鈥

Suftin-Glowski and fellow demonstrators gathered at what they dubbed the 鈥淢artyred Palestinian Children鈥檚 Plaza鈥 outside the East Campus, distributing flyers demanding that Microsoft end all contracts with Israeli authorities, conduct a transparent, independent audit of its technology and investments, and ensure protections for Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim employees.

The group also called for transparency about Microsoft鈥檚 Israeli business ties, a full investigation of contracts in line with the Geneva Conventions, and support for Amazon workers opposing the transfer of surveillance data from Azure to Amazon Web Services.

Recent reports, including an expose in The Guardian, revealed Microsoft data centers hosted vast troves of phone call recordings swept up by Israeli military surveillance.

Microsoft responded by severing a limited set of services for the unit in question, but, under pressure from campaigners, has not ended all business with Israel鈥檚 government or military.

鈥淣o Azure for Apartheid鈥 called Microsoft鈥檚 partial step 鈥渁n unprecedented win鈥 achieved through sustained pressure but said it remains 鈥渋nsufficient,鈥 demanding a full termination of all Azure contracts with the Israeli government and military.

The protests are unfolding as a Gaza ceasefire negotiated by Hamas and Israel, with US President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration brokering the deal, goes into effect after two years of war.

Despite the breakthrough and expected release of hostages and prisoners, observers stress that major risks and unresolved issues remain.


Dubai Lynx 2026 opens for entries, updates categories

Dubai Lynx 2026 opens for entries, updates categories
Updated 10 October 2025

Dubai Lynx 2026 opens for entries, updates categories

Dubai Lynx 2026 opens for entries, updates categories
  • New Luxury Lynx award to celebrate creative excellence in luxury sector

DUBAI: Dubai Lynx, a regional creative festival and awards program organized by Cannes Lions, is now accepting entries for the 2026 awards.

This year sees the addition of a new category, the Luxury Lynx Awards.

Marian Brannelly, global director of Awards, LIONS, told Arab News: 鈥淭he luxury sector is evolving rapidly.

鈥淒riven by innovation and an increasingly discerning audience, brands in this sector are at the cutting edge of culture, shaping and reframing excellence.鈥

The award will spotlight 鈥渂randed communications and solutions that drive business performance and brand loyalty,鈥 and aim to 鈥渟et a new benchmark鈥 for the regional luxury industry, according to Dubai Lynx.

Other categories have also been updated to reflect the region鈥檚 evolving creative landscape.

The Design Lynx Award now features a new section, Transformative Design, which will recognize the role of design in driving innovation while delivering measurable impact.

The Social & Creator Lynx Award, previously known as the Social & Influencer Lynx Award, has been renamed and expanded, with five new sub-categories, to recognize the growing role of influencers and content creators in marketing.

Dubai Lynx is also broadening the scope of Glass: The Award for Change, extending its focus beyond gender to include issues such as disability, race, sexuality and social inequity.

Entrants must specify the community the work represents; explain the problem it addresses and demonstrate its impact on that community.

Other changes include updates to the Digital Craft and Creative Commerce categories, along with the introduction of a new Cultural Engagement sub-category across multiple awards.

鈥淓ach year, the awards spotlight the work that not only defines the MENA creative landscape but also demonstrates the power of creativity to deliver real business results and cultural impact,鈥 said Kamille Marchant, director of Dubai Lynx.

鈥淎s the industry evolves, Dubai Lynx remains a platform that celebrates those setting new standards, pushing boundaries and driving the future of creativity forward,鈥 he told Arab News.

The deadline for submissions is Jan. 22, 2026, and the awards ceremony will take place on April 1, 2026, in Dubai.


Afghan mobile access to Facebook, Instagram intentionally restricted: watchdog

Afghan mobile access to Facebook, Instagram intentionally restricted: watchdog
Updated 09 October 2025

Afghan mobile access to Facebook, Instagram intentionally restricted: watchdog

Afghan mobile access to Facebook, Instagram intentionally restricted: watchdog
  • Netblocks said last week鈥檚 blackout 鈥渁ppears consistent with the intentional disconnection of service鈥
  • Social media sites have been intermittently accessible on smartphones in provinces across the country since Tuesday, while Internet speed is significantly slower than normal

KABUL: Access to several social media sites, including Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat, has been 鈥渋ntentionally restricted鈥 in Afghanistan, an Internet watchdog said Wednesday, a week after a 48-hour telecommunications blackout in the country.
Social media sites have been intermittently accessible on smartphones in provinces across the country since Tuesday, AFP journalists reported, while Internet speed is significantly slower than normal.
鈥淭he restrictions are now confirmed on multiple providers, the pattern shows an intentional restriction,鈥 said NetBlocks, a watchdog organization that monitors cybersecurity and Internet governance.
The disruption is 鈥減rimarily impacting mobile with some fix-lines also affected.鈥
The Taliban government has not responded to requests for comment from AFP.
Confusion gripped Afghanistan last Monday when mobile phone service and the Internet went down without warning, freezing businesses and cutting people off from the rest of the world.
The massive blackout came weeks after the government began cutting high-speed Internet connections to some provinces to prevent 鈥渋mmorality,鈥 on the orders of shadowy supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada.
At the time, Netblocks said the blackout 鈥渁ppears consistent with the intentional disconnection of service,鈥 adding that connection slowed to around one percent of ordinary levels.
It is the first time since the Taliban government won their insurgency in 2021 and imposed a strict version of Islamic law that communications have been cut in the country.
The government has yet to comment on the blackout.
For Afghan girls and women in particular, the Internet is a lifeline in a country where they are banned from secondary schools, universities, gyms, parks and most work.
鈥淚 would feel really sad if they banned Instagram or other social media because it鈥檚 the only way I can connect with the world,鈥 said 24-year-old Ghezal, who asked for only her first name to be used.
鈥淭hese social media platforms are the main way I stay connected with my friends who live in other countries.鈥
At the beginning of 2025, 13.2 million people had access to the Internet in Afghanistan 鈥 around 30.5 percent of the population, according to the specialist website DataReportal.
Around 4.05 million people were using social media.


New documentary shows life in Gaza for AFP journalists

New documentary shows life in Gaza for AFP journalists
Updated 08 October 2025

New documentary shows life in Gaza for AFP journalists

New documentary shows life in Gaza for AFP journalists
  • Helen Lam Trong鈥檚 documentary 鈥淚nside Gaza鈥 traces the lives of 7 journalists who covered the beginning of the Gaza conflict

PARIS: A new documentary tells the story of AFP journalists who were trapped in the Gaza Strip at the beginning of the Israeli offensive, witnessing the destruction of their own reality through a lens.
Independent journalist Helen Lam Trong鈥檚 documentary 鈥淚nside Gaza鈥 will be screened at the Bayeux prize for war reporters award ceremony on Thursday in the presence of six of the seven permanent AFP journalists who covered the beginning of the Gaza conflict, before being broadcast on French-German TV channel Arte on December 2.
It traces their daily lives after October 7, 2023, when Hamas attacks in Israel led to the deaths of more than 1,200 people, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Then came the Israeli offensive, which has killed more than 67,000 people, according to figures from the Hamas-run health ministry 鈥 figures the United Nations considers reliable.
Day after day, the journalists had no choice but to document the unimaginable suffering of their own people.
鈥淚 wanted to explain what this profession is, which is primarily carried out in the field,鈥 Trong, who co-produced the documentary with AFP鈥檚 documentary production unit Factstory, told AFP.
鈥淚nside Gaza鈥 almost exclusively relies on AFP images, mostly taken by the journalists who testify in it.

Attempts to discredit

Reporting in Gaza means being surrounded by children who are injured or in shock, and dead bodies wrapped in shrouds or buried under the rubble.
There is no let-up, as Israel has forbidden foreign journalists from entering the Palestinian territory.
鈥淭hey are seasoned journalists in their fifties, and they know how to maintain their rigour under conditions of extreme urgency and discomfort,鈥 said Trong, who conducted lengthy interviews with them after they left Gaza in early 2024.
But attempts to discredit these journalists are frequent.
AFP journalist Mohammed Abed recalls several Western media outlets asking him to prove that a child had died, after pro-Israel lobby groups claimed that a photo he had taken of a father embracing his dead child in a shroud was actually that of a doll.
鈥淲e have rarely seen such questioning of information disseminated by experienced journalists,鈥 said Trong. 鈥淧alestinian journalists have faced the ultimate level of distrust from the media.鈥

Journalists a target

What is broadcast is 鈥渇ar, far from reality,鈥 the director said, describing a careful curation process and a decision to remove the most disturbing footage from the film 鈥 a difficult task given the extent of Gaza鈥檚 destruction.
AFP鈥檚 seven journalists and their families were evacuated between February and April 2024 and now reside in Doha, Cairo and London, struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder.
The news agency is now working with a dozen freelancers in Gaza.
鈥淭he purpose of the film is to provoke reflection on what journalists do鈥 as the profession faces global threats 鈥 particularly in Gaza, where the press is constantly targeted, said film producer and Factstory鈥檚 documentary unit head Yann Ollivier.
鈥淚 hope that those who claim there are no journalists in Gaza will be compelled, after watching this film, to acknowledge that there are indeed journalists there, and that they adhere to the ethics of factual journalism,鈥 he told AFP.
Around 200 journalists have been killed in the Gaza Strip since the war began, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders.


Google expands AI Mode to Arabic and 35 other languages

Google expands AI Mode to Arabic and 35 other languages
Updated 08 October 2025

Google expands AI Mode to Arabic and 35 other languages

Google expands AI Mode to Arabic and 35 other languages
  • New feature allows users to submit questions via text, voice, offering advanced reasoning, multimodal search

LONDON: Google has rolled out its AI Mode feature in Google Search to 36 new languages, including Modern Standard Arabic, reaching over 200 countries and territories.

Powered by Google鈥檚 Gemini 2.5 model, AI Mode offers users advanced reasoning, multimodal search, and the ability to explore topics in depth using follow-up questions and contextual links.

The tool builds on Google鈥檚 AI Overviews 鈥 the company鈥檚 existing artificial intelligence feature at the top part of Google Search results 鈥 and allows users to submit questions via text, voice, or images.

鈥淲hen people use AI Mode to search for a topic, our systems aim to surface relevant links, including news pages, and connect people with a breadth of content and perspectives from across the web, on a wide range of queries,鈥 Najeeb Jarrar, Google鈥檚 regional product and marketing director for the Middle East and Africa, said in a statement to Arab News.

鈥淲e aim to show an AI-powered response as much as possible, but in cases where we don鈥檛 have high confidence, you will see a set of web search results.鈥

The update follows the feature鈥檚 launch in English in the MENA region this August.

Google reports that users in markets where AI Mode is live are now submitting queries two or three times as long as traditional search inputs, reflecting a shift in how people seek information online.

However, the rollout has also prompted debate among experts, many of whom caution that AI-driven search may significantly reduce website traffic by providing direct answers instead of routing users to external pages.

Some studies have found that Google鈥檚 AI Overviews have reduced traffic to original websites by as much as 30 to 70 percent, depending on the query.

However, Google, along with other major AI firms, argues the new model is driving 鈥渕ore queries and higher quality clicks.鈥

The company鈥檚 AI Mode uses a 鈥渜uery fan-out鈥 technique, running multiple background searches and aggregating them into a single, cohesive response meant to offer greater breadth and depth than standard search results.

The company said it will continue to add features and capabilities to AI Mode and plans future integration into the main Search experience.

AI Mode appears as a tab on Google Search results, as well as on the Google app for Android and iOS.