How PR firms are whitewashing genocide in Gaza to rebrand Israel’s global image

How PR firms are whitewashing genocide in Gaza to rebrand Israel’s global image
After the UN confirmed famine in Gaza, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu (center) and his wife, Sara (seated to his right), met in late September with US pro-Israel influencers in New York. (Israeli government photo)
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How PR firms are whitewashing genocide in Gaza to rebrand Israel’s global image

How PR firms are whitewashing genocide in Gaza to rebrand Israel’s global image
  • PR firms and marketing agencies are under fire for promoting Israeli narratives amid ongoing war in Gaza
  • Israel is spending unprecedented millions on a large-scale, tech-savvy strategy to polish its global reputation

DUBAI: Contracts filed under the US Foreign Agents Registration Act have revealed the reach of a sprawling, state-backed media campaign, funded by an additional $150 million approved last year, for Israel’s foreign ministry to polish the country’s tarnished reputation.

The campaign, known in Hebrew as Hasbara, comes as Israel’s military operation in Gaza, launched in retaliation for the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack, has been widely branded an act of genocide against the Palestinian people.

Major public relations firms now face accusations of whitewashing Israel’s behavior.

Recent FARA disclosures uncovered a highly coordinated, tech-driven propaganda operation through the German division of Havas Media Group — one of the world’s largest advertising firms — and a network of politically connected American PR agencies.




Amid warnings of famine setting in in Gaza (above), a pro-Israel PR group came up with the meme (lower frame) denying the existence of people starving in the Palestinian enclave. (AFP)

The strategy aims to flood the internet with content crafted to reshape global perception of Israel, particularly among US and European audiences, as images of civilian casualties and razed neighborhoods in Gaza continue to dominate headlines and social media.

The most advanced aspect of this propaganda machine involves manipulating AI-driven content.

Clock Tower X, a US firm led by President Donald Trump’s former campaign aide Brad Parscale, was hired by Havas to create websites designed to influence how AI models like ChatGPT respond to prompts about Israel and the war in Gaza.

This tactic, known as GPT framing, aims to embed pro-Israel narratives directly into the training data.

According to the $6 million contract, drafted on Aug. 27, Clock Tower X plans to produce targeted content for Generation Z audiences across TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, podcasts and other digital platforms in response to declining support for Israel among younger Americans.

The company said it would complete an “initial cultural, demographic and sentiment research report” for Israel within 30 days, according to a FARA filing.

To maximize reach, the firm is also using MarketBrew AI, a predictive search engine optimization tool, to “improve the visibility and ranking of relevant narratives” on search engines like Google and Bing.




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On Tuesday, another FARA filing revealed a $900,000 influencer campaign, dubbed the “Esther Project,” which pays US-based TikTok and Instagram influencers up to $7,000 per post to promote pro-Israel content.

The campaign, involving 14 to 18 influencers, is managed by Bridges Partners LLC, a firm subcontracted by Havas to recruit and coordinate US-based influencers to “assist with promoting cultural interchange between the US and Israel.”

Another US-based firm, Stagwell Global, conducted polling and focus groups to advise the Israeli government on messaging strategies for international media.

On Sept. 5, independent outlet Drop Site News published leaked documents claiming that Stagwell Group had been commissioned by Israel’s foreign ministry to test campaign messages aimed at improving the country’s image in the US and Europe.




Sherry Adud, Elyse Slaine, Lacey Adud and Esther Michaels attend The Lawfare Project Hamptons 2025 Benefit To #EndJewHatred at Southampton Arts Center on August 07, 2025 in Southampton, New York. (AFP)

The PR firm, led by longtime Israeli ally and American political strategist Mark Penn, advised that the most effective strategy was to stoke fear of “radical Islam” and religious extremism.

The leaked report showed recommendations on using messages about terrorism, suggesting that framing these ideologies as threats to other religions was a tactic shown to be especially persuasive among conservative audiences.

SKDK, a subsidiary of Stagwell Group, is also responsible for running an AI-powered influence campaign aimed at flooding platforms like X, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube and LinkedIn with pro-Israel content, according to Sludge News.

The $600,000 contract, signed on April 28 and filed under FARA in August, outlined plans on how SKDK will “flood the zone” with pro-Israel messages using automated AI-powered bots to amplify the reach and visibility of the content.

SKDK was also tasked with training Israeli spokespeople for media appearances, coordinating outreach to global outlets including CNN, BBC and Fox News, and testing the use of, and potentially work with, influencers.

However, SKDK ended its work with the Israeli government soon after and began deregistering on Aug. 31. Stagwell also confirmed it had concluded its involvement, according to a statement provided to Politico.

Both companies were reportedly subcontracted by Havas.

In a statement to Arab News, a Stagwell spokesperson said the company was hired as a subcontractor by Havas to “complete this work as part of a broader project” but it did not “know the nature of Havas’ broader contract with the (Israeli ministry).”

“Our agencies work across the political and issue spectrum and this project done by a small team working on a defined brief does not reflect a shift in that approach,” the spokesperson said. The polling project for Israel, they said, had been completed.

Havas did not immediately respond to Arab News’ request for comment.

The FARA revelations have sparked industry-wide outrage and a call for stronger ethics and regulation in the PR industry.

Industry bodies like the Public Relations and Communications Association and the Chartered Institute of Public Relations have a set of international guidelines that require agencies to uphold transparency and accuracy.

Abeer Al-Najjar, associate professor of media and journalism studies at the American University of Sharjah, said under the international PR codes of ethics, contracts between a state and a PR agency should be disclosed to allow the media and public to assess the context of information campaigns.

“This allows journalists to make informed judgments about materials, interviews or narratives promoted by the agency,” she told Arab News.




Abeer Al-Najjar, associate professor of media and journalism studies at the American University of Sharjah. (AFP/File)

l-Najjar said that ethical standards required PR professionals to “avoid spreading misinformation, unverifiable claims or selective framing that could distort public understanding” — principles that are critical during a time of conflict such as the one in Gaza to “protect the integrity of journalism, ensure accountability and prevent PR from becoming a tool of propaganda.”

In light of the recent FARA revelations, industry nonprofit, the Ethical Agency Alliance, said on Thursday that it was expanding its commitments to include the refusal of “all contracts that involve manipulating public opinion to obscure, justify or sanitize atrocities — including war crimes, crimes against humanity or other serious breaches of international law — through communications, branding or public relations.”

Despite the lack of strict regulations, Chris Doyle, director of the London-based Council for Arab-British Understanding, said PR professionals had a duty to “do no harm.”

“It is very hard to imagine a way in which a PR firm could work with a state (such as) Israel that is in the process of genocide, the crime of apartheid and other war crimes and not violate that cardinal principle,” he told Arab News.

In 2017, global PR firm Bell Pottinger was expelled from the Public Relations and Communications Association following an investigation into its campaign allegedly designed to spark racial tensions in South Africa.

In 2015, another firm, Edelman, came under fire over its representation of ExxonMobil and Shell while it publicly promoted sustainability. Senior staff members and notable clients severed their relationship with the firm, criticizing it for its unethical greenwashing practices.

At a time when PR firms often get a bad rap, it would be prudent for them to stay away from political campaigns, Doyle said.

“For any firm to get into a situation where they are seen as participants in a war (or) assisting a party committing war crimes … it should be catastrophic for their reputations. The fact that it is not begs questions about how they’re held to account.”

He said Israel, with a record of spreading misinformation and disinformation, made it impossible for PR agencies to implement their duty to be honest and not spread falsehoods.

Hasbara is not new. Israel is accused of running coordinated information warfare campaigns during every major assault on Gaza in 2012, 2014 and 2021.

Its propaganda apparatus has grown significantly in scale and technological sophistication, evolving into a fully digitized operation that spans search engine manipulation, influencer payments, AI model training and deepfake visuals.


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Earlier reports, including a May 2024 investigation by Qatari media, documented the alleged use of AI-powered “superbots” designed to swarm social platforms, target pro-Palestinian posts and amplify Israeli talking points in real time.

The bots, said to be increasingly indistinguishable from human users, are part of a wider shift toward algorithmic propaganda.

According to Israeli media reports, the $150 million boost approved in December represented a more than twentyfold increase in its typical budget for international messaging — an urgent push to salvage Israel’s image as it faces mounting diplomatic pressure and global isolation.

Al-Najjar warned of the damage that state-funded campaigns can cause to public trust and discourse as well as meaningful journalism.

For example, they might include “reputation laundering, agenda-setting, and selective storytelling, all of which can suppress or marginalize critical reporting,” she said.

The risks are exacerbated by technology, as governments “increasingly deploy superbots, paid influencers and AI-driven content to simulate grassroots opinion, misrepresent public sentiment and overwhelm critical voices.”

Al-Najjar said that over time, propaganda normalized as marketing eroded trust, desensitized audiences to atrocity, distorted history and silenced marginal voices.

It also resulted in “a distorted global understanding of conflict, where ethical debates, accountability and informed public discourse are compromised.”

When PR executive Richard Edelman warned brands in January 2024 to “stay out of politics” amid the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or risk long-term damage, his advice seems to have fallen on deaf ears among many in the industry.

Now, PR firms engaged in Israeli-backed campaigns are entangled in accusations of complicity in genocide, with their reputations on the line.

As Lameya Chaudhury, head of social impact at advertising firm Lucky Generals, said in a statement by the Ethical Agency Alliance: “Let’s be clear: If you take money to sanitize atrocities, you’re complicit.”

The PR and advertising industry “can’t keep pretending it’s neutral” because “every time you take a brief, you take a side,” she said.


Media watchdog urges Israel to release detained journalists from Global Sumud Flotilla

Media watchdog urges Israel to release detained journalists from Global Sumud Flotilla
Updated 02 October 2025

Media watchdog urges Israel to release detained journalists from Global Sumud Flotilla

Media watchdog urges Israel to release detained journalists from Global Sumud Flotilla
  • Committee to Protect Journalists said at least 32 journalists were on board flotilla vessels heading towards Gaza
  • ‘Detaining members of the press while reporting on a humanitarian mission is a clear violation of international maritime law,’ organization says

LONDON: The Committee to Protect Journalists called on Israel to “immediately and unconditionally” release all journalists arrested on board the Global Sumud Flotilla, which was intercepted by Israeli forces while attempting to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza.

The CPJ said at least 32 journalists were on 39 vessels heading toward the territory when they were stopped by Israeli authorities on Wednesday and Thursday.

“Detaining members of the press while reporting on a humanitarian mission is a clear violation of international maritime law and a dangerous escalation in Israel’s pattern of attacks against journalists,” said Sara Qudah, CPJ’s regional director.

“World leaders must act now to defend press freedom, protect journalists, and demand accountability.”

The flotilla, which set sail from Spain in late August, consists of more than 40 civilian vessels carrying medicine, food and other humanitarian supplies. About 500 parliamentarians, lawyers, activists and journalists from more than 40 countries are on board.

It represents the highest-profile attempt yet to challenge Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza, which has contributed to widespread famine and suffering in the territory.

In a message posted on social media platform X, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said all but one vessel was en route to Israel, and detained activists would be deported to Europe.

While the CPJ stated 32 journalists were on flotilla vessels, it remained unclear which of them were detained, aside from Yassine Al-Gaidi, Hayat Al-Yamani, Lotfi Hajji, and Anis Al-Abbassi.

Suhad Bishara, the director of the legal department at the Adalah Center, which is defending the activists, said her team was in the Israeli city of Ashdod following up on the detentions.

“Currently, the picture is not complete,” she said. “Regarding deportation or any legal proceedings, it could be this evening, after the immigration authority begins the process, and it could take several days.”

The interceptions and detentions sparked international condemnation. Amnesty International described Israel’s actions as a “brazen assault” designed to punish and silence critics of its blockade and military campaign in Gaza.

“The decades-long impunity for Israel’s violations of international law must end,” said Agnes Callamard, the organization’s secretary-general.

“Governments worldwide must demand the immediate release of all detainees and the lifting of the unlawful blockade to allow humanitarian aid to flow freely.”


Music platform MDLBEAST launches Newsroom for consolidated media access

Music platform MDLBEAST launches Newsroom for consolidated media access
Updated 02 October 2025

Music platform MDLBEAST launches Newsroom for consolidated media access

Music platform MDLBEAST launches Newsroom for consolidated media access
  • Hub will host official press releases, fact sheets, and a media library covering all the company’s activities

LONDON: Saudi music and new media platform MDLBEAST has introduced “Newsroom,” a dedicated hub designed to centralize its press resources and media content in one place.

According to MDLBEAST, the new platform will provide easier access to updates and releases for journalists and the public alike.

The Newsroom will host official press releases, fact sheets, and a media library covering all the company’s activities, including live events, the annual Sandstorm Festival, and initiatives by the MDLBEAST Foundation.

By bringing its resources together, the company says it hopes to improve transparency, save time for media professionals, and strengthen its global visibility.

“This centralized hub ensures you can find everything you need about MDLBEAST all in one place,” the company said in a statement.


Newborn daughter of British MP subjected to online abuse hours after birth

Newborn daughter of British MP subjected to online abuse hours after birth
Updated 02 October 2025

Newborn daughter of British MP subjected to online abuse hours after birth

Newborn daughter of British MP subjected to online abuse hours after birth
  • Adnan Hussain says X account inundated with ‘vile’ comments after posting pixelated photo
  • ‘Absolutely racist’ comments came as ‘no great shock,’ Hussain said, adding that society is being led ‘down a very dark abyss of hatred’

LONDON: The newborn daughter of British MP Adnan Hussain was targeted by a wave of sexist, Islamophobic, and racist abuse on social media just hours after her birth, Hussain told The Guardian on Thursday.

Hussain, who represents Blackburn as an Independent Alliance member and won his seat in 2024 after running a pro-Gaza campaign, said his X account was inundated with “vile” comments after posting a pixelated photo of his daughter.

“The atmosphere around us is darkening, both online and offline,” he said, describing the attacks as “a very dark abyss of hatred and despair.”

He called for concerted action to push back against growing hate speech in the UK.

Hussain said on Facebook the response was overwhelmingly supportive, including goodwill from people with different political views.

In contrast, the environment on X quickly shifted, with posts questioning his Britishness and demanding he and his daughter “be sent back to their ancestral homeland.”

Many of the comments, he said, were “absolutely racist” and he added that, sadly, “they came as no great shock.”

As a first-time father, Hussain, who is of Pakistani descent, said the episode highlights how unchecked hate speech and online racism now have “very real, very dangerous, real-world consequences,” and called on those in leadership to do more to address the issue.

He also urged tech companies to do more to moderate content and questioned the motives of social media platforms that allow such comments to go unchecked.

Hussain left the Labour Party after Keir Starmer became leader, and has continued to campaign against online hatred and for greater representation of minorities in politics.

His experience comes as MPs across parties report a surge in online abuse.

In July, Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty said he had been “inundated with racist comments” after debating reforms to UK governance, while Labour MP Satvir Kaur described “extreme” and misogynistic online hate as “constant, almost on a daily basis.”

Hussain argued that there are determined forces seeking to “lead society down a very dark abyss of hatred,” but that “a force just as strong, just as determined, should hit back, and say enough, we will not allow this.”


Meet Ali Akbar, the last newspaper hawker in Paris

Meet Ali Akbar, the last newspaper hawker in Paris
Updated 02 October 2025

Meet Ali Akbar, the last newspaper hawker in Paris

Meet Ali Akbar, the last newspaper hawker in Paris
  • Akbar left Pakistan for France at the age of 20 and survived in Paris selling newspapers
  • French President Macron has vowed make Akbar a knight in the national order of merit

PARIS: Ali Akbar knows everyone and everyone knows him. The last newspaper hawker in Paris zigzags each day from cafe to cafe, shouting humorous headlines in the heart of the French capital.
“France is getting better!” he cries, just one of the headlines he invents to sell his wares round the upmarket streets of Saint-German-des-Pres.
“(Eric) Zemmour has converted to Islam!” he shouts, referring to the far-right candidate at the 2022 presidential elections.
Locals and tourists on the Left Bank, the intellectual and cultural heart of Paris, look on amused.
“Even the walls could talk about Ali,” smiled Amina Qissi, a waitress at a restaurant opposite the Marche Saint-Germain, who has known Akbar for more than 20 years.
Now 73, Akbar, a slim, fine-featured “character” with newspapers tucked under his arm, is a neighborhood legend, she added.
“Even regular tourists ask where he is if they don’t see him,” she told AFP.

Pakistani born 73-year-old newspaper hawker Ali Akbar sells newspaper copies in the street of the Latin Quarter in Paris on September 16, 2025. (AFP)

Hard life 

French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to soon make Akbar a knight in the national order of merit in recognition of his “dedicated service to France.”
“At first I didn’t believe it. Friends must have asked him (Macron) or maybe he decided on his own. We often crossed paths when he was a student,” said Akbar.
“I believe it’s related to my courage, because I’ve worked hard,” he added.

Akbar, who wears round spectacles, a blue work jacket and a Gavroche cap, mainly sells copies of the French daily Le Monde.
When he arrived in France at the age of 20, hoping to escape poverty and send back money to his family in Pakistan, he worked as a sailor then a dishwasher in a restaurant in the northern city of Rouen.
Then in Paris he bumped into Georges Bernier, the humorist also known as Professeur Choron, who gave him the chance to sell his satirical newspapers Hara-Kiri and Charlie Hebdo.
Akbar has been homeless, experienced extreme poverty and had even been attacked — but despite the hardships, he said he has never given up.
“Emmanuel Macron is going to put a bit of antiseptic on my wounds,” he told his son Shahab, who at 30 is the youngest of his five children.
Shahab, who describes himself as “very proud” of his father, enjoys cataloguing the numerous profiles dedicated to his father in the foreign press.
When he started out as a hawker in the 1970s, Akbar focused on the Left Bank of the river Seine, which was a university area “where you could eat cheaply,” he said.
On the rue Saint-Guillaume in front of the prestigious Sciences Po university, he recalled learning French from interactions with students like former prime minister Edouard Philippe and “many others who became ministers or lawmakers.”

‘A good mood’ 

Paris used to have about 40 newspaper hawkers — street vendors without a fixed newsstand — who were posted at strategic locations such as the entrances to metro stations.

Pakistani born 73-year-old newspaper hawker Ali Akbar sells newspaper copies in the street of the Latin Quarter in Paris on September 16, 2025. 

Akbar stood out by choosing to walk around, selecting the Latin Quarter. In the 1980s, he started inventing sensational headlines.
“I want people to live happily. I do it to create a good mood, that’s all,” he said.
But he admitted that he is finding it increasingly difficult to come up with good jokes.
“Everything is such a mess,” he added.
Akbar, who receives a pension of 1,000 euros ($1,175) a month, still works from 3 p.m. until 10 p.m. each day.
When AFP met him on a recent afternoon, clients were few and far between. On average, he sells about 30 newspapers every day, compared to between 150 and 200 when he started.
“As long as I’ve got the energy, I’ll keep going. I’ll work until I die,” he joked.
On the terrace of one cafe, Amel Ghali, 36, said Akbar was “inspiring.”
“It’s good to see it in the digital age,” he said. “Unfortunately, our children won’t experience the pleasure of reading a newspaper with a coffee.”
 


Snapchat introduces fees for storing old posts, photos

Snapchat introduces fees for storing old posts, photos
Updated 01 October 2025

Snapchat introduces fees for storing old posts, photos

Snapchat introduces fees for storing old posts, photos
  • Snapchat said that it was introducing new “Memories storage plans” for users with more than 5GB of data
  • Packages are offered for 100GB, 250GB with Snapchat+ or 5TB with Snapchat Platinum

DUBAI: Snapchat has announced it will start charging users for saved posts and photos that exceed 5GB of storage.

In a blog post, Snapchat said that it was introducing new “Memories storage plans” for users with more than 5GB of data.

“For the vast majority of Snapchatters, who have less than 5GB of Memories, nothing will change,” the company said, adding that users with larger data needs could upgrade their storage to retain content in the feature introduced in 2016.

The packages are offered for 100GB, 250GB with Snapchat+ or 5TB with Snapchat Platinum.

The company acknowledged that “it’s never easy to transition from receiving a service for free to paying for it,” but said that the value provided from the paid service “is worth the cost.”

“These changes will allow us to continue to invest in making Memories better for our entire community,” it added.

Snapchat has not disclosed the full pricing of its new packages, but a company spokesperson told TechCrunch that the initial 100GB storage plan would cost $1.99 per month, while 250GB would be included in the $3.99 Snapchat+ subscription.

It noted that since the “Memories” feature was rolled out, users stored more than 1 trillion worth of posts and pictures.

Users exceeding the 5GB limit will have 12 months of temporary storage and can download their content directly to their devices, the company said.