Photo group says it has ‘suspended attribution’ of historic Vietnam picture because of doubts

Photo group says it has ‘suspended attribution’ of historic Vietnam picture because of doubts
Vietnam War survivor Kim Phuc Phan Thi (L), also known as the "Napalm Girl," poses with photojournalist Nick Ut holding his 1972 Pulitzer Prize and World Press Photo award-winning photograph during the presentation of the Spanish edition of her book at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Worship in San José on April 12, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 17 May 2025

Photo group says it has ‘suspended attribution’ of historic Vietnam picture because of doubts

Photo group says it has ‘suspended attribution’ of historic Vietnam picture because of doubts
  • World Press Photo honored AP’s Nick Ut with its ” photo of the year ” in 1973
  • Picture of girl running from a napalm attack became an iconic symbol of the war’s tragedy

An organization that honored The Associated Press’ Nick Ut with its ” photo of the year ” in 1973 for a picture of a girl running from a napalm attack in the Vietnam War says it has “suspended its attribution” to Ut because of doubts over who actually took it.
World Press Photo’s report Friday adds to the muddle over an issue that has split the photographic community since a movie earlier this year, “The Stringer,” questioned Ut’s authorship. The photo of a naked and terrified Kim Phuc became an iconic symbol of the war’s tragedy.
After two investigations, The Associated Press said it found no definitive evidence to warrant stripping Ut’s photo credit. The AP said it was possible Ut took the picture, but the passage of time made it impossible to fully prove, and could find no evidence to prove anyone else did.
World Press Photo said its probe found that two other photographers — Nguyen Thanh Nghe, the man mentioned in “The Stringer,” and Huynh Cong Phuc — “may have been better positioned” to take the shot.
“We conclude that the level of doubt is too significant to maintain the existing attribution,” said Joumana El Zein Khoury, executive director of World Press Photo. “At the same time, lacking conclusive evidence pointing definitively to another photographer, we cannot reassign authorship, either.”
World Press Photo, an organization whose awards are considered influential in photography, won’t attempt to recover the cash award given to Ut, a spokeswoman said.
Ut’s lawyer, James Hornstein, said his client hadn’t spoken to World Press Photo after some initial contact before “The Stringer” was released. “It seems they had already made up their mind to punish Nick Ut from the start,” he said.
Gary Knight, a producer of “The Stringer,” is a four-time judge of the World Press Photo awards and a consultant to the World Press Photo Foundation.
The AP said Friday that its standards “require proof and certainty to remove a credit and we have found that it is impossible to prove exactly what happened that day on the road or in the (AP) bureau over 50 years ago.”
“We understand World Press Photo has taken different action based on the same available information, and that is their prerogative,” the statement said. “There is no question over AP’s ownership of the photo.”
Meanwhile, the Pulitzer Prize that Ut won for the photo appears safe. The Pulitzers depend on news agencies who enter the awards to determine authorship, and administrator Marjorie Miller — a former AP senior editor — pointed to the AP’s study showing insufficient proof to withdraw credit. “The board does not anticipate future action at this time,” she said Friday.


US jails two men for 25 years over plot to kill Iranian-American reporter

US jails two men for 25 years over plot to kill Iranian-American reporter
Updated 29 October 2025

US jails two men for 25 years over plot to kill Iranian-American reporter

US jails two men for 25 years over plot to kill Iranian-American reporter
  • Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarov, both members of an eastern European criminal gang, orchestrated a failed plot to assassinate campaigning reporter Alinejad
  • US has accused Iran of seeking to assassinate US officials in retaliation for Washington’s killing of Revolutionary Guards commander Qasem Soleimani in 2020

NEW YORK: A US judge jailed two men for 25 years each Wednesday for a plot allegedly hatched by Tehran to kill Iranian-American journalist Masih Alinejad, her team confirmed to AFP.
Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarov, both members of an eastern European criminal gang, orchestrated a failed plot to assassinate campaigning reporter Alinejad.
“They wanted to see me dead on my porch in Brooklyn and thanks to the law enforcement agencies, I am alive and Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader (of Iran), is humiliated,” Alinejad said outside a Manhattan courthouse following the sentencing, brandishing a sunflower.
“I was nervous but at the same time very empowered to speak the truth,” she added before dancing and singing in Farsi.
Amirov and Omarov were both jailed for 25 years, a spokesman for Alinejad said following the hearing, after prosecutors had sought 55-year terms for each, according to court filings.
According to the Justice Department, the jailed men, members of the eastern European crime network, were “contracted” by Ruhollah Bazghandi — identified as a brigadier general in Iran’s Revolutionary Guards — and other members of his network to murder Alinejad.
In July 2022, a man hired to carry out the assassination was arrested near Alinejad’s New York home with a loaded AK-47 assault rifle, the court heard over the two week trial.
The 49-year-old Alinejad, one of the most prominent dissident campaigners against Iranian authorities, for years has pushed for the abolition of the obligatory headscarf in Iran under the banner of “MyStealthyFreedom.”
She left Iran in 2009.
Charges were unsealed in October 2024 against Bazghandi, a former intelligence officer.
Three other Iranians with “connections to the government of Iran” — Hajj Taher, Hossein Sedighi and Seyed Mohammad Forouzan — were indicted over the affair.
The three are not in US custody and are believed to be in Iran. They face charges of conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire and money laundering.
Tehran has routinely rejected similar US accusations about alleged plots to kill American officials or politicians in the past.
The United States has also accused Iran of seeking to assassinate US officials in retaliation for Washington’s killing of Revolutionary Guards commander Qasem Soleimani in 2020.
The State Department previously announced a $20 million reward for information leading to the arrest of the alleged Iranian mastermind behind a plot to assassinate former White House official John Bolton.


Google, Amazon agree to Israel’s ‘wink’ demand to signal foreign data access, investigation reveals

Google, Amazon agree to Israel’s ‘wink’ demand to signal foreign data access, investigation reveals
Updated 29 October 2025

Google, Amazon agree to Israel’s ‘wink’ demand to signal foreign data access, investigation reveals

Google, Amazon agree to Israel’s ‘wink’ demand to signal foreign data access, investigation reveals
  • Leaked documents show agreement is part of a $1.2bn cloud-computing deal, Project Nimbus, signed in 2021

DUBAI: Tech giants Google and Amazon agreed to use a secret code to warn their client, the Israeli government, if their data was being handed over to foreign law enforcement, according to a joint investigation by The Guardian, Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine, and Hebrew-language outlet Local Call.

The agreement was part of a $1.2 billion cloud-computing deal inked in 2021, known as Project Nimbus. It stemmed from Israel’s concerns that the data it stores on these tech companies’ cloud platforms could end up in the hands of foreign law enforcement authorities.

Tech companies must comply with requests from law enforcement and security agencies to hand over customer data for investigative purposes. Moreover, they are often prohibited from informing the customer that their data has been disclosed.

Therefore, Israeli officials developed the so-called “winking” mechanism, under which Google and Amazon would send secret signals, hidden in payments, to the Israeli government, revealing the identity of the country to which they had been compelled to hand over Israeli data.

According to leaked documents from Israel’s Finance Ministry, which include a finalized version of the Nimbus agreement, payments must be made “within 24 hours of the information being transferred” and correspond to the telephone dialing code of the foreign country, amounting to sums between 1,000 ($308) and 9,999 shekels.

For example, if either firm provided information to authorities in the US, where the dialing code is +1, they would have to send the Israeli government 1,000 shekels.

If they share Israeli data with authorities in Italy, where the dialing code is +39, they would have to send 3,900 shekels.

In cases where the companies concluded they were under a gag order preventing them from indicating which country had received the data, they must pay 100,000 shekels to the Israeli government.

The agreement also includes measures that prohibit the US companies from restricting how the Israeli government and its branches, including the military and security services, use their cloud services.

Both companies’ standard “acceptable use” policies state that their cloud platforms should not be used to violate the legal rights of others, nor to engage in or encourage activities that cause “serious harm” to people.

However, according to an Israeli official familiar with the Nimbus project, there can be “no restrictions” on the kind of information stored in Google and Amazon’s cloud platforms.

The leaked documents state that Israel is “entitled to migrate to the cloud or generate in the cloud any content data they wish.”

Legal experts said the agreement is extremely unusual and risky, as the coded messages could violate legal obligations in the US, where Google and Amazon are headquartered.

“It seems awfully cute and something that if the US government or, more to the point, a court were to understand, I don’t think they would be particularly sympathetic,” a former US government lawyer told The Guardian.

Both Google and Amazon’s cloud businesses have denied evading any legal obligations. Neither responded to The Guardian’s questions about whether they had used the “wink.”

An Amazon spokesperson said that the company has a “rigorous global process for responding to lawful and binding orders for requests related to customer data,” adding that there are no “processes in place to circumvent our confidentiality obligations on lawfully binding orders.”

Google declined to comment on which of Israel’s demands it had accepted in the Nimbus deal, but said it was “false” to “imply that we somehow were involved in illegal activity, which is absurd.”

A spokesperson for Israel’s Finance Ministry said: “The article’s insinuation that Israel compels companies to breach the law is baseless.”

Google and Amazon are “bound by stringent contractual obligations that safeguard Israel’s vital interests,” and “we will not legitimize the article’s claims by disclosing private commercial terms,” the spokesperson added.


Fast Company Middle East, MCN release white paper linking DEI to economic growth in the region

Fast Company Middle East, MCN release white paper linking DEI to economic growth in the region
Updated 29 October 2025

Fast Company Middle East, MCN release white paper linking DEI to economic growth in the region

Fast Company Middle East, MCN release white paper linking DEI to economic growth in the region
  • 76 percent say DEI directly contributes to GDP growth and long-term resilience

DUBAI: Fast Company Middle East and regional advertising group Middle East Communications Network have released a new white paper highlighting the importance of diversity, equity and inclusion as a powerful driver of creativity, business performance and sustainable economic growth across the Middle East.

Titled “The Middle East’s Inclusive Economy,” the white paper draws on proprietary survey data, statistics and regional case studies to explore the impact of DEI across sectors such as finance, oil and gas, hospitality, healthcare and retail.

The survey, conducted in the first two quarters of this year, found that 85 percent of respondents believe that DEI has had a strong positive impact on industry and regional economic performance.

More than half (53 percent) reported increased participation from underrepresented groups in their workforce, and 76 percent observed higher retention rates when DEI is embedded into company strategy.

A further 76 percent also said that DEI directly contributes to gross domestic product growth and long-term resilience.

The paper highlights the concept of “inclusion as infrastructure,” and argues that inclusion and equity should be treated as foundational systems rather than short-term initiatives.

It notes that when DEI is deeply embedded into hiring, leadership and workplace culture, organizations outperform their peers in engagement, creativity and retention.

George Giessen, head of brands at MCN agency MullenLowe MENA, said that DEI is more than just a moral imperative.

Although a “fair and equitable society is important,” the research demonstrates DEI’s power to drive growth; “a lever one can pull to achieve organizational goals and accomplish economic visions of a nation,” he told Arab News.

“In short: DEI has a practical and measurable use in economies,” he added.

Still, there is a gap in the region. DEI is “still regularly treated as a reputational add-on rather than a driver of business value,” said Ghassan Harfouche, group CEO of MCN MENAT & president of McCann Worldgroup APAC.

The white paper is MCN’s response to this gap, aiming to serve as a “data-driven tool designed to help organizations reframe DEI as infrastructure for growth,” he added.

Governments across the region are increasingly adopting DEI into policy and regulatory frameworks. , for instance, has nearly doubled female labor force participation from 22.5 percent in 2006 to 43.2 percent in 2024.

Meanwhile, the UAE leads the Middle East and North Africa region in gender equality, according to the 2025 Global Gender Gap Index. It mandates 30 percent female representation in private sector leadership and has more than 23,000 Emirati businesswomen leading ventures valued at more than $13.6 billion.

The whitepaper is the first step in “a wider journey to better understand the bottom line impact of DEI” and provide the “framework to further evolve DEI in our businesses,” Giessen said.


Emmy-winning journalist Amjad Tadros launches memoir ‘The Fixer’ in Amman

Emmy-winning journalist Amjad Tadros launches memoir ‘The Fixer’ in Amman
Updated 28 October 2025

Emmy-winning journalist Amjad Tadros launches memoir ‘The Fixer’ in Amman

Emmy-winning journalist Amjad Tadros launches memoir ‘The Fixer’ in Amman
  • The Fixer is a powerful reflection on three decades of journalism in the Middle East, taking readers behind the scenes of major events and conflicts through Amjad’s curious eyes

AMMAN: The world of journalism came together in Amman to celebrate the official launch of The Fixer, a witness memoir by Amjad Tadros, a respected Middle East journalist and a four-time Emmy Award winner for investigative reporting.

The book launch was held in the presence of Her Royal Highness Princess Rym Ali, on Sunday, October 26, 2025, at the InterContinental Hotel Amman.

The choice of venue holds deep personal significance for Amjad; it marks the place where his remarkable career began, a journey that took him from Amman to some of the world’s most challenging news frontlines.

The Fixer is a powerful reflection on three decades of journalism in the Middle East, taking readers behind the scenes of major events and conflicts through Amjad’s curious eyes.

Blending history, investigative storytelling, and personal experience, the book offers a rare look into the human and ethical challenges faced by those who risk everything to uncover the truth.

Former Jordanian foreign minister Dr. Marwan Muasher, who wrote the book’s foreword, notes that “Tadros has managed to write an account that is thrilling, insightful, and accurate, all at once.”

Amjad Tadros has built an outstanding reputation for his work with CBS News and the acclaimed program 60 Minutes, where his reporting helped shape global understanding of the Middle East. His groundbreaking investigations have earned him four Emmy Awards for Outstanding Investigative Journalism.

“The pursuit of truth inspired me to gather the things I saw, the things I heard, and the things I know, to help readers explore the history, narrative, and confusion of my complicated, crazy, yet wonderful region,” Tadros writes in the preface to The Fixer.

The launch event featured a short keynote speech by veteran journalist Hassan Fattah, a discussion with the author, followed by a book signing and media reception.

The Fixer is available on Amazon and at the Readers Bookstore and books@cafe-Abdoun in Amman.


Slain Palestinian journalist’s brother says new findings over killing reveal US cover-up

Slain Palestinian journalist’s brother says new findings over killing reveal US cover-up
Updated 28 October 2025

Slain Palestinian journalist’s brother says new findings over killing reveal US cover-up

Slain Palestinian journalist’s brother says new findings over killing reveal US cover-up
  • Comments came days after New York Times report revealed Shireen Abu Akleh was intentionally killed, but that the Biden administration ‘soft-pedaled’ this assessment to appease Israel
  • ‘No government should compromise the truth and the safety of its citizens to protect political interests,’ says Tony Abu Akleh

LONDON: The brother of journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, who was shot dead by the Israeli army while covering a raid in the West Bank in 2022, has alleged that new revelations from an American military officer who investigated her killing reveal a US cover-up.

Tony Abu Akleh’s comments follow a report by The New York Times stating that Col. Steve Gabavics and four other unnamed sources who were part of the investigative team concluded that Shireen, a Palestinian-American correspondent for Al Jazeera, was intentionally killed, but that the administration of then US President Joe Biden “soft-pedaled” this assessment to appease Israel.

“It was from day one we knew everything. They were trying to cover it up … obviously for political gains,” Tony told the BBC on Tuesday.

“We believe that the US government intentionally downplayed these findings and softened the language just to avoid holding Israel accountable, which is really disappointing. No government should compromise the truth and the safety of its citizens to protect political interests.”

Shireen was killed while reporting on an Israeli army raid in Jenin in May 2022.

Multiple investigations by the UN, The New York Times, and others concluded she was deliberately shot by Israeli forces.

Although Israel initially blamed Palestinian gunmen, it later acknowledged she was very likely shot by an Israeli soldier who “misidentified” her.

The Biden administration supported this narrative, stating it “found no reason to believe” the US citizen was intentionally targeted, a position Tony described at the time as a “whitewash.”

Gabavics, a retired US military policeman involved in the investigation, told The New York Times earlier this week that he was certain the Israeli sniper knew he was targeting a journalist, even if not Shireen specifically.

Based on records of Israeli military radio traffic, Shireen’s clearly visible position, and the precision of the shot, Gabavics stressed that the evidence strongly suggested the shooting was deliberate.

He also revealed that he clashed with his then superior, Lt. Gen. Michael R. Fenzel, over the question of intent, which resulted in Gabavics being sidelined.

Gabavics, who was the key informant behind a Zeteo documentary claiming to identify the shooter, told the BBC that the evidence reviewed “indicated clearly that it was intentional.”

He said: “I would like the administration to really go back and talk to Israel and hold them accountable, to make them actually do a deliberate investigation, even with the facts almost, you know, multiple years removed. They still exist there, that they can go back to make a determination.”

On Tuesday, media rights groups also called for “an independent and transparent” investigation into the killing.

“The US government owes the public — and Shireen Abu Akleh’s family — more than words of regret,” said the Committee to Protect Journalists’ CEO Jodie Ginsberg.

“It has a responsibility to its citizens. These new disclosures reinforce the need for an independent investigation that finally delivers accountability. Without such accountability, Israeli forces will continue to take journalists’ lives — because they know they can do so without consequence.”