‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies
Neither attended the event. “Saturday Night Live” was the night’s biggest winner with 11 awards for its 50th season. (AP)
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Updated 1 min 16 sec ago

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies
  • Lamar won for music direction of his Super Bowl halftime show, while Obama won for documentary narration
  • Neither attended the event. “Saturday Night Live” was the night’s biggest winner with 11 awards for its 50th season

LOS ANGELES: Kendrick Lamar and Barack Obama each won their second career Emmys on Sunday night, while the 50th season of “Saturday Night Live” was the biggest winner with 11 on the second night of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards.
Lamar and Tony Russell won for the music direction of his Super Bowl halftime show. He won his first Emmy in 2022 as a performer at the Super Bowl halftime headlined by Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg.
Obama won a star-studded documentary narrator category that also included Tom Hanks, Idris Elba and David Attenborough. He won the same award in 2022.
Neither Lamar nor Obama was at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles to accept his Emmy. Neither were expected to be, at a show that despite several high-profile winners including Jimmy Kimmel, Conan O’Brien and Alan Cumming is primarily devoted to behind-the-scenes crew members a week before TV’s stars take the same stage for the bigger Emmys ceremony.
Presenter Jordan Klepper laughed along with the crowd as he said, “Apparently, Barack Obama couldn’t be here tonight” after announcing the winner.
“SNL 50: The Anniversary Special,” the pinnacle of a season-long celebration for the NBC sketch institution, won seven Emmys, including awards for its directing, writing, hairstyling and editing. A pop-up immersive experience tied to the special won an Emmy for emerging media and regular episodes of the show won three more.
HBO’s “Pee-wee as Himself” won four awards including best documentary, posthumously giving its star and subject Paul Reubens, who died in 2023, his first Emmy.
O’Brien won two Emmys for his travel series, “Conan O’Brien Must Go,” taking his career total to six. And while he didn’t get one personally for the show, Netflix’s “Conan O’Brien: The Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize For American Humor” beat out football halftime shows from Lamar and Beyoncé to win best variety special.
Beyoncé did win a previously announced special Emmy for the costumes on her Christmas Day “Beyoncé Bowl” on Netflix.
Kimmel, who has hosted both the Oscars and the Emmys multiple times, was here to accept his fourth Emmy, for best host of a game show for his work on “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.”
He thanked the show’s late original host Regis Philbin for making “Millionaire” a cultural phenomenon.
“Regis was the best at this,” Kimmel said backstage. “It is exciting to have this and to know that he has this same Emmy in his family’s collection somewhere.”
“Jeopardy” won best game show, while Cumming won best host of a reality show for “The Traitors.”
The two-night Creative Arts Emmys hands out nearly 100 awards in hyper-specific categories that can bring oddities. Like the Grammys and Oscars winning Emmys, as each did Sunday.
The CBS Grammys telecast won for its choreography, while ABC’s Oscars telecast — also hosted by O’Brien — won for its production design.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting was honored with the Television Academy’s Governors Award even as it winds down its nearly 60-year work after the US government withdrew funding from the institution that has helped pay for PBS, NPR, 1,500 local radio and TV stations
The award goes to a person or entity “made a profound, transformational and long-lasting contribution to the arts and/or science of television.”
“Even an act of Congress can not erase an indelible legacy,” Henry Louis Gates Jr., host of “Finding Your Roots” on PBS, said during the presentation.
“Queer Eye” won best structured reality show, while “Love on the Spectrum” won best unstructured reality show.
The Creative Arts show runs quickly and efficiently — 47 awards are handed out on Sunday aloe in about 2 1/2 hours — but the atmosphere is loose. Swearing is allowed because of the lack of TV, as Kimmel showed when he told nominee Will Ferrell to shut up during his speech.
“This is the Emmys for the people that the people who run the Emmys don’t think should be seen on network TV,” presenter Sarah Silverman said when she opened the show as a presenter.
The two nights are edited down into one show that will air on TV on FXX on Saturday. The following day, the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards, hosted by Nate Bargatze, will air live on CBS.
While Sunday honored variety, documentary and reality TV, scripted series had the stage on Saturday.
“The Studio” won nine early Emmys including best guest actor in a comedy for Bryan Cranston, making it the front-runner to end up with the biggest total after next Sunday’s main show.
“Severance” was tops among dramas with six awards, including best guest actress in a drama for Merritt Wever.
“The Penguin” pulled in eight in the limited series categories, and Julie Andrews won her third Emmy at age 89 for her voice-over work on “Bridgerton.”


What to know: Asia Cup T20 puts continental cricket heavyweights in focus

What to know: Asia Cup T20 puts continental cricket heavyweights in focus
Updated 2 min 49 sec ago

What to know: Asia Cup T20 puts continental cricket heavyweights in focus

What to know: Asia Cup T20 puts continental cricket heavyweights in focus
  • Asia Cup tournament begins from Sept. 9-28, featuring associate teams Hong Kong, UAE and Oman
  • Asia Cup began in 1984 with only Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka, has expanded and is staged every 2 years

Five of the world’s top 10 Twenty20 teams will compete in the 17th Asia Cup, starting in the United Arab Emirates from Tuesday, with defending champion India grouped together with archrival Pakistan.

Here’s what to know:

COMPETING TEAMS

India is No. 1, and Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh hold Nos. 7-10 in the International Cricket Council’s T20 rankings. Joining them in the tournament, which starts with two groups of four, are Hong Kong, UAE and first-timer Oman. All three of the Associate teams qualified via the ACC Premier Cup, where Nepal only narrowly missed out.

India and Pakistan being bracketed together should catch a billion-plus TV audience and raise substantial revenue for the Asian Cricket Council. Oman and UAE are the other teams in that group.

The other group contains Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Hong Kong.

PROGRESSION

The top two teams in each group will advance to the Super 4 stage.

The groups have been formed in a way that traditional on-field and off-the-field rivals — Pakistan and India — could meet three times during the tournament, if both teams go all the way to the final on Sept. 28.

Dubai will host 11 games, including the final, and Abu Dhabi will host eight games.

ASIA CUP HISTORY

The continental tournament, which began in 1984 with only Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka, has expanded and is now staged every two years, alternating between the ODI and T20 formats depending on which ICC World Cup is next in line.

With India and Sri Lanka set to co-host the T20 World Cup next February, this Asia Cup is also in the sport’s shortest international format.

India has won the title eight times, followed by Sri Lanka with six. Pakistan won the last of its two titles in 2012.

HYBRID MODEL

The Board of Control for Cricket in India had been due to host the Asia Cup but preferred to organize the tournament in the UAE to avoid the logistical issues that come with the strained political relationship between India and Pakistan.

The neighboring countries don’t engage in bilateral tours with each other, which limits their head-to-head encounters to multinational tournaments at neutral venues.

When Pakistan hosted the Champions Trophy earlier this year, it organized for all India’s games to be staged in Dubai.

SUPER FOUR

India is a firm favorite with stars including captain Suryakumar Yadav, Shubman Gill, Hardik Pandya and Jasprit Bumrah in its ranks. With the slow wickets likely to suit spinners, India has plenty of options with Axar Patel, Varun Chakravarthy and Kuldeep Yadav keen to exploit the conditions.

Pakistan has been relying on a fleet of all-rounders after ignoring its two stalwarts Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan since Dec. 2024 in the shortest format. Under new coach Mike Hesson, Pakistan has played a majority of its T20 games with only three specialist bowlers, using four allrounders to bowl out the remaining overs. Whether Hesson’s template works against the likes of India remains to be seen. 

But Hesson’s blueprint at least worked in a build-up to the Asia Cup when Afghanistan crashed to its second lowest-ever T20 score of 66 against Mohammad Nawaz’s hat-trick in the final of the tri-series at Sharjah on Sunday.

Afghanistan has plenty of spin options and could edge either Bangladesh or Sri Lanka for a place in the Super 4. Led by Rashid Khan, the leading wicket-taker in T20 cricket, Afghanistan also has experienced off-spinner Mohammad Nabi, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, left-arm spinner Noor Ahmad and rookie AM Ghazanfar to challenge batters of any opposition on spin-friendly wickets.

Despite losing to Bangladesh in the recent bilateral T20 series, Sri Lanka could has the potential to make the Super 4 with opening batter Pathum Nissanka in good form at the top of the order. Wanindu Hasaranga, who injured a hamstring against Bangladesh, has regained fitness and will team up with Maheesh Theekshana and Dunith Wellalage to boost the spin options.

T20 FORMAT

It follows conventional cricket rules, where taking wickets and scoring runs are the main objectives for the bowling and batting teams, but does so in a shorter, sharper timeframe. Each team is allocated one 20-over innings to bat in each game. The main aim remains to score more runs than the opposition. Matches last around three hours.


India hopes ‘insights’ from Pakistan clash will help woo arms buyers

India hopes ‘insights’ from Pakistan clash will help woo arms buyers
Updated 9 min 39 sec ago

India hopes ‘insights’ from Pakistan clash will help woo arms buyers

India hopes ‘insights’ from Pakistan clash will help woo arms buyers
  • India and Pakistan traded missiles, drone strikes, artillery fire, bombed each other with jets in May 
  • One of world’s top arms importers, India is now determined to recast itself as major producer, exporter 

NEW DELHI: The skies lit up during the four-day clash between India and Pakistan in May as drones were blasted from the air by missiles that showcased what New Delhi believes is a “new vision” of warfare.

India now hopes that the demonstration of its combat capabilities, which included a domestically developed “invisible shield” missile defense system, will fuel international demand.

“The operation was a sign of the new art of warfare, a glimpse of a new vision, technological advancements and self-reliance,” Defense Minister Rajnath Singh said in August.

Long one of the world’s top arms importers, India is now determined to recast itself as a major producer and exporter of weapons.

Defense exports reached a record $2.8 billion in 2024-25, still small compared to established players, but up 12 percent from the year before and 34 times higher than a decade ago.

Domestic defense production also surged to a record $18 billion, nearly doubling in five years.

India now exports defense equipment to more than 100 countries, with the United States, France and Armenia among the top buyers, according to the defense ministry.

Exports range from missiles, boats and artillery to radar systems, rocket launchers, software and electronic components.

‘GOLDEN INSIGHTS’

The May conflict was the worst between the nuclear-armed neighbors since 1999, with more than 70 people killed in missile, drone and artillery exchanges.

Both sides claimed victory, each boasting of downing the other’s fighter jets.

A senior Indian army officer said the clashes provided a “very good understanding” of how new weapons performed.

“These were golden insights for us — and our rapidly expanding industry partners,” he told AFP.

Among the weapons tested was Akashteer, or “Sky Arrow,” a vehicle-mounted air defense platform powered by artificial intelligence that intercepted volleys of missiles and armed drones.

India also fired several long-range BrahMos cruise missiles at Pakistani air bases.

Co-developed with Russia and already exported to the Philippines, the BrahMos drew fresh attention after the conflict.

“Because of the stellar performance of these BrahMos missiles, 14 or 15 countries have reached out to supply these missiles,” Singh said at a military factory opening in July.

Ashok Malik, of The Asia Group business consultancy, said the conflict acted “like a market demonstrator.”

“It is one thing for me to buy something which you’ve made,” Malik said. “It is another to buy something which you’ve made and successfully used in the field.”

AIR DEFENSE

India’s defense budget has more than doubled in the past decade, reaching $78 billion.

At the same time, India has sought to ease its reliance on Russian hardware, signing import and production deals with the United States, France and Israel.

The industry push comes as New Delhi balances relations with Washington and Moscow, while also countering China — Pakistan’s chief arms supplier.

That tightrope act has grown harder since Washington imposed 50 percent tariffs on many Indian products to punish New Delhi for buying Russian oil.

Hence the “Make in India” drive as the country seeks to develop fighter jet engines and pledges to build an Israeli-style Iron Dome system it calls “Sudarshan Chakra” — the spinning discus weapon of the Hindu god Vishnu.

India has also highlighted its fast-growing drone sector, which it says could be worth $11 billion by 2030, including several models developed while working closely with Israeli firms.

However, challenges remain.

Murlidhar Mohol, junior minister for civil aviation, told parliament in April that 39 percent of critical smaller drone components had been “sourced from manufacturers based in China.”


‘All I see is blood’: Kony survivors recall horrors ahead of trial

‘All I see is blood’: Kony survivors recall horrors ahead of trial
Updated 18 min 9 sec ago

‘All I see is blood’: Kony survivors recall horrors ahead of trial

‘All I see is blood’: Kony survivors recall horrors ahead of trial
  • Every evening, Everlyn Ayo left her village in northern Uganda, trekking with thousands of other children known as “night commuters” hoping to escape the horrors of Joseph Kony

GULU: Every evening, Everlyn Ayo left her village in northern Uganda, trekking with thousands of other children known as “night commuters” hoping to escape the horrors of Joseph Kony and his Lord’s Resistance Army.
The messianic Kony, whose case is finally being heard by the International Crime Court (ICC) from Tuesday, led one of the world’s most barbaric insurgencies, massacring and mutilating tens of thousands of people across the region, kidnapping children and turning them into child soldiers and sexual slaves.
Ayo saw the brutality first hand when Kony’s forces attacked her school in Nwoya district when she was around five years old.
“The rebels raided the school, killed and cooked our teachers in big drums and we were forced to eat their remains,” she told AFP from her home in the nearby city of Gulu.
Twenty years ago, Kony became the first person ever issued with an arrest warrant by the ICC, though his war crimes hearing will be in absentia since he has never been caught.
Ayo, now 39, will be among those following the case on her radio, thousands of miles from the sterile courtroom in The Hague.
After her school was attacked, Ayo’s family sent her to relatives in a remote village.
But that was also considered dangerous, and so she became a so-called night commuter, one of the emblematic features of a conflict that raged through much of the 1990s and 2000s.
Every night, she would walk around five kilometers, joining thousands of other children trekking through forests and jungle to stay in towns or shelters where they hoped there was less risk of being kidnapped by Kony’s army.
“We would leave the villages at 4:00 p.m. because the distances were long and we feared the villages at night. In the morning, we had to wait for daylight at around 8:00 am to return,” Ayo said.
The shelters were sporadically guarded by government troops, though they would often abandon their posts, themselves fearful of Kony’s fanatical forces.
“We were so many children that even if you did not cover yourself at night, you did not feel cold because we were squeezed together,” Ayo recalled.
Each morning, after walking for hours, they would find new horrors.
“Many times, on our return to the village, we would find blood-soaked dead bodies. Seeing all that blood as a child traumatized my eyes.
“For many years now, I do not see well, all I see is blood.”
Wilfred Lalobo, 60, showed AFP a monument built in Lukodi, just outside Gulu, for 69 people killed in an attack by Kony’s forces on May 19, 2004.
“When the rebels arrived, the government troops were few, and they fled,” he said.
“Then they started killing civilians. Some people were stabbed with bayonet, others hacked and the rest burned alive in their houses.”
“On that day, my four-year-old daughter, Akello Lalobo was among those killed. My brother’s wife and six other relatives of mine were also killed,” Lalobo added.
Kony’s trial will be closely followed here, particularly by those who have sought to rebuild the region’s many shattered lives.
Stella Angel Lanam was 10 when she was captured by the LRA, which indoctrinated her into becoming a child soldier. She spent nine years in captivity.
Now 38, she is director of the War Victims and Children Networking Initiative, which offers counselling, training and other support in the region.
Lanam said the trial was a comfort, offering some justice to Kony’s many victims.
“Even though we have passed through a lot, we cannot lose hope,” she said.
“Will the government or Kony repair me back to the way I was? No. But at least I will get justice.”
Ayo worries that the world has too quickly forgotten the extreme trauma suffered at the hands of Kony’s forces.
She hopes he will one day see real justice.
“Joseph Kony should be punished severely in a way that the world will never forget,” Ayo said.


Pakistan skipper Agha dedicates UAE tri-nation series win to nation’s flood victims

Pakistan skipper Agha dedicates UAE tri-nation series win to nation’s flood victims
Updated 51 min 42 sec ago

Pakistan skipper Agha dedicates UAE tri-nation series win to nation’s flood victims

Pakistan skipper Agha dedicates UAE tri-nation series win to nation’s flood victims
  • Pakistan beat Afghanistan by 75 runs on Sunday to clinch tri-nation series also involving UAE
  • Salman Ali Agha, Shaheen Shah Afridi, donate match fees from entire series to flood relief fund

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan T20 cricket captain Salman Ali Agha dedicated his team’s victory in the tri-nation series in the UAE to flood victims in his country, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said on Sunday, urging others to come forward and help victims of the calamity. 

Floods in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province, also known as the country’s breadbasket, have caused devastation for millions since late August. Torrential rains and excess floodwaters released by India have inundated over 4,100 villages in the province, killing at least 56 in Punjab and affecting over four million. 

Pakistan stomped Afghanistan in the final of the tri-nation series on Sunday in Sharjah, which also featured hosts UAE. The Green Shirts won the toss and elected to bat first, putting on 141/8 on a pitch that offered turn and bounce to spinners. In response, Afghanistan were bundled out for a paltry 66 runs in 15.5 overs, courtesy of stellar spin bowling by all-rounder Mohammad Nawaz, who returned figures of 5/19 from his four overs. 

“We stand with our brothers and sisters in this difficult time of hardship,” Agha was quoted as saying by the PCB. “Everyone should come forward together to help the flood victims.”

Agha and lethal left-arm pacer Shaheen Shah Afridi both announced they would dedicate their entire match fees from the tri-nation series to the government’s flood relief fund. 

“The soil of our homeland is demanding from us today to help the flood-affected people,” Afridi was quoted as saying by the board. “I appeal to the nation to actively contribute to the flood relief fund.”

The Green Shirts will now prepare for the upcoming Asia Cup tournament, slated to be held in the UAE from Sept. 9-28. Pakistan will begin their campaign to win the title on Sep. 12 against Oman before taking on defending champions India on Sept. 14 in Dubai. 
 


Safe rides, new freedoms: Women take the wheel in Pakistan’s ride-hailing market

Safe rides, new freedoms: Women take the wheel in Pakistan’s ride-hailing market
Updated 08 September 2025

Safe rides, new freedoms: Women take the wheel in Pakistan’s ride-hailing market

Safe rides, new freedoms: Women take the wheel in Pakistan’s ride-hailing market
  • VSisters is Pakistan’s first ride-hailing service run entirely by female drivers for female passengers
  • From students to working mothers, the app offers women safety, dignity and income opportunities

ISLAMABAD: In Pakistan’s federal capital, where public transport options remain limited, Aisha Umar waits at her doorstep with her handbag clutched tightly under her arm. Within minutes, a motorbike with pink and white hues glides to a stop in front of her. The rider — helmet strapped — is not a man but a woman.

For Umer, a 29-year-old working woman, this is more than just a commute. It is relief, safety and a sense of dignity on the road.

While there is a lack of consolidated data, women in Pakistan have long complained of harassment by captains of mainstream ride-hailing apps, with some documented incidents. The helpline of non-profit Digital Rights Foundation, for instance, received eight complaints related to Careem and inDrive in 2022, while police have occasionally registered complaints against drivers in major cities. But experts say most of these cases go unreported, with UN Women and Aurat Foundation surveys showing up to 90 percent of women face some sort of harassment during commutes, which underscores why women-only services like VSisters are filling the gaps.

Launched in June this year, VSisters is Pakistan’s first women-only ride-hailing service, a bold move aimed at providing safe, comfortable and harassment-free transportation through cars and motorbikes exclusively for women, with both riders and passengers being female.

Currently, the app operates in Islamabad, Rawalpindi and Lahore, with active female captains numbering 464 in total: 64 in Islamabad, 44 in Rawalpindi and 356 in Lahore.

“I got to know about VSisters through Instagram,” Umar told Arab News. “I felt very happy that I can now travel with a female rider. I never felt comfortable with male captains, and the best thing is that their rates are much lower than other apps.”

According to Pakistan’s 2023 population census, women comprise 48.51 percent of the country’s roughly 241.5 million people. Thousands of them travel daily for education, work and other commitments.

Women wait for transportation in Islamabad on April 21, 2020. (AFP/File)

Umer said she was satisfied with the service, as they reached the desired pick-up point within five to ten minutes.

“I prefer bike because it is easy to get out in a rush and the best thing about them [female riders] is that they never speed recklessly,” she added.

Pakistan’s ride-hailing market is currently dominated by inDrive, Bykea, and Yango after Uber shut down its app in 2024 and Careem suspended its core ride-hailing service in June this year, citing “worsening economic conditions and stiff market competition.”

Hassan Tariq, the founder of VSisters, said the idea came from a painful memory of an incident at a traffic signal in Islamabad, where a woman jumped off the back of a bike and began beating the rider for his humiliating behavior.

“I could feel that the women are actually not very comfortable driving around with the stranger men,” he told Arab News.

“It made me believe that this is the right time to have a dedicated service exclusively for women, where female drivers operate both cars and motorbikes, and the service caters only to female passengers,” he added.

Tariq said the aim of the platform is for women to feel safe and secure, with services run by women, for women and centered entirely around them.

He said the service has completed over 3,500 rides in this short time in three cities and expansion is already underway.

“In just one week, we will expand to Karachi, Faisalabad and Multan, and in the near future, we aim to grow into a nationwide company,” he added.

Describing the criteria to become part of VSisters, he said that for both motorbikes and cars, the requirement was the same: applicants had to be over 18 years of age, with a valid license and a Computerized National Identity Card.

“That’s it. We don’t require anything else on the ground,” he added.

Tariq said that women have to bring their own cars, while motorbikes are provided by the company, as he neither had sponsors nor wanted to run the platform with heavy commercial interests.

“I only keep a small share of 10 percent, which is very nominal and quite normal,” he added.

Like drivers on other apps, VSisters captains are also considered independent contractors, not formal employees. Pakistan has yet to pass laws guaranteeing benefits for gig workers.

Uzma Ahmed, a VSisters captain, said she found strength behind the wheel.

A 50-year-old divorcee and mother of three, she previously worked as a schoolteacher before deciding to leave her job since her salary could no longer cover her rent and her children’s fees.

“I had no choice,” she said. “I had to run the house.”

Now, as a car captain, she not only earns a respectable livelihood but also gives comfort to other women riding with her.

“When women sit with me, they are happy,” she said, adding sometimes the passengers call their families and tell them they are going with a woman driver.

“We both feel comfortable and talk openly, which is very different from when women ride with men,” Ahmed added.

Today, she drives her own car across Islamabad’s gated communities, confident in her independence.

“It is respectable work,” she added with pride. “With this, I can pay my rent, my children’s fees and stand on my own feet.”

Nadia Shehzad, a bike rider and instructor at VSisters, said she first learned to ride a motorbike through the platform before its launch, and now she trains other young women so they too can start their own work.

“I teach them how to ride the bike, how to use the app, and it is going great,” she said, adding that the whole training was free of cost.

Talking about her experience as a rider, Shehzad said occasionally she faced jeers and abusive remarks, which she ignored.

“All men are not bad, even some praise and give good comments, but others make offensive remarks we usually ignore,” she added.

She explained that the service is mostly used by female university students and working women, whose parents feel more at ease with women drivers, and many passengers prefer bikes as the more affordable option.

“The income depends on the number of rides but usually if a rider does 12 rides in a day, she earns around Rs2,500 ($8.90),” she added.

At approximately Rs2,500 ($8.81) a day, a VSisters rider can earn more than Pakistan’s minimum wage of Rs37,000–40,000 ($140.8) a month. This is a little less than what many Careem and Bykea captains report taking home at around Rs3500 ($12.46), though incomes vary by number of hours.

Pakistani lawyer and activist Nighat Dad, who runs the not-for-profit Digital Rights Foundation organization, termed VSisters a welcome initiative that responds to the “very real fears” women face in Pakistan’s transport sector.

“It not only offers safer commuting options but also new economic opportunities for women drivers,” she told Arab News.

Dad said for VSisters to truly set a new benchmark, it needs to strengthen privacy protections and app reliability alongside its bold vision of women driving women.

“Genuine safety must also mean digital safety and at present the app’s own disclosures show that sensitive location and contact data is collected without encryption, in a country where we still lack a comprehensive data protection law,” she said.