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American prisoner found in Syria is not journalist Austin Tice

Update Marc and Debra Tice, the parents of US journalist Austin Tice (portrait L), who was abducted in Syria more than six years ago, give a press conference in the Lebanese capital Beirut on December 4, 2018. (AFP)
Marc and Debra Tice, the parents of US journalist Austin Tice (portrait L), who was abducted in Syria more than six years ago, give a press conference in the Lebanese capital Beirut on December 4, 2018. (AFP)
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Updated 12 December 2024

American prisoner found in Syria is not journalist Austin Tice

American prisoner found in Syria is not journalist Austin Tice

WASHINGTON: The American prisoner reportedly found in Az-Zyabeyeh district south of Damascus was not journalist Austin Tice, AlArabiya reported on Thursday.

There have been conflicting reports earlier on whether Tice has been found, with Syria TV citing sources the individual found in the Damascus countryside was not the missing journalist.

AlArabiya later reported that the individual was named Travis Timmerman, who illegally traveled into Syria from Lebanon seven months ago and has been held in captivity since.

A video posted on social media meanwhile showed Timmerman telling the interviewer that he went to Syria on a ā€˜religious pilgrimage.’

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ā€œThe American who was found in Syria is not Austin Tice. He told me his name is Travis. He refused to give a last name. He said he was a ā€œpilgrimā€ and that he crossed into Syria by foot before he was detained. He was held in prison for seven months and said he was well treated,ā€ journalist Matt Bradley posted on X.

ā€œWhen I asked him about the religious beliefs that compelled him to cross the mountains from Lebanon into Syria, he told me he had ā€œbeen reading the scripture a lotā€ lately but others interrupted before he could elaborate.ā€

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President Joe Biden said Sunday that the US government believes missing American journalist Austin Tice, who disappeared 12 years ago near the Syrian capital, is alive and that Washington is committed to bringing him home after Bashar Assad’s ouster from power in Damascus.

ā€œWe think we can get him back,ā€ Biden told reporters at the White House, while acknowledging that ā€œwe have no direct evidenceā€ of his status. ā€œAssad should be held accountable.ā€

Biden said officials must still identify exactly where Tice is after his disappearance in August 2012 at a checkpoint in a contested area west of Damascus.

ā€œWe’ve remained committed to returning him to his family,ā€ he said.

Tice, who is from Houston and whose work had been published by The Washington Post, McClatchy newspapers and other outlets.

A video released weeks after Tice went missing showed him blindfolded and held by armed men and saying, ā€œOh, Jesus.ā€ He has not been heard from since. Syria has publicly denied that it was holding him.

The United States has no new evidence that Tice is alive, but continues to operate under the assumption he is alive, according to a US official. The official, who was not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity, said the US will continue to work to identify where he is and to try to bring him home.

His mother, Debra, said at a news conference Friday in Washington that the family had information from a ā€œsignificant source,ā€ whom she did not identify, establishing that her son was alive.

ā€œHe is being cared for and he is well — we do know that,ā€ she said.

The Tice family met this past week with officials at the State Department and the White House.

ā€œTo everyone in Syria that hears this, please remind people that we’re waiting for Austin,ā€ Debra Tice said in comments that hostage advocacy groups spread on social media Sunday. ā€œWe know that when he comes out, he’s going to be fairly dazed & he’s going to need lots of care & direction. Direct him to his family please!ā€


Journalist Mariam Dagga’s final images show where she was killed by an Israeli strike in Gaza

Journalist Mariam Dagga’s final images show where she was killed by an Israeli strike in Gaza
Updated 29 August 2025

Journalist Mariam Dagga’s final images show where she was killed by an Israeli strike in Gaza

Journalist Mariam Dagga’s final images show where she was killed by an Israeli strike in Gaza
  • Dagga and other reporters regularly based themselves at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis during the war
  • She documented the experiences of ordinary Palestinians who had been displaced

GAZA CITY: The last photos taken by Mariam Dagga show the damaged stairwell outside a hospital in the Gaza Strip where she would be killed by an Israeli strike moments later.

Dagga, a visual journalist who freelanced for The Associated Press, was among 22 people, including five reporters, killed Monday when Israeli forces struck Nasser Hospital twice in quick succession, according to health officials.

The photos, retrieved from her camera on Wednesday, show people walking up the staircase after it was damaged in the first strike while others look out the windows of the main health facility in southern Gaza.

The Israeli military said it targeted what it believed was a Hamas surveillance camera, without providing evidence. Witnesses and health officials said the first strike killed a cameraman from the Reuters news agency doing a live television shot and a second person who was not named. A senior Hamas official denied that Hamas was operating a camera at the hospital.

Dagga, 33, and other reporters regularly based themselves at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis during the war. She documented the experiences of ordinary Palestinians who had been displaced from their homes, and doctors who treated wounded or malnourished children.

Algeria’s ambassador to the United Nations, his voice breaking and on the verge of tears, read a letter Wednesday to the UN Security Council that Dagga wrote days before she was killed.

It was addressed to her 13-year-old son, Ghaith, who left Gaza at the start of the war to live with his father in the United Arab Emirates.

Holding up a photo of Dagga, Amar Bendjama called her ā€œa young and beautiful motherā€ whose only weapon was a camera.

ā€œGhaith. You are the heart and soul of your mother,ā€ Bendjama quoted Dagga as writing. ā€œWhen I die, I want you to pray for me, not to cry for me.ā€

ā€œI want you never, never to forget me. I did everything to keep you happy and safe and when you grow, when you marry, and when you have a daughter, name her Mariam after me.ā€


Journalists rally in London to support colleagues in Gaza

Journalists rally in London to support colleagues in Gaza
Updated 29 August 2025

Journalists rally in London to support colleagues in Gaza

Journalists rally in London to support colleagues in Gaza
  • Protesters deliver letter to PM Starmer demandingĢżaccountability and stepped up UK action to protect media workers
  • Letter said more than 200 journalistsĢżhave been killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza since the October 7, 2023Ģż

LONDON: Journalists in the UK rallied Wednesday in central London in solidarity with colleagues in Gaza, in the wake of two Israeli military strikes earlier this week that killed five journalists.
Members of Britain’s National Union of Journalists (NUJ) gathered outside the Downing Street office and residence of Prime Minister Keir Starmer, delivering a letter demanding accountability and stepped up UK action to protect media workers.
Attendees then held a vigil, reading aloud the names of more than 200 journalists that press watchdogs have counted as killed in Gaza since the October 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas and subsequent Israeli military response.
Monday’s strikes in southern Gaza’s Khan Yunis killed at least 20 people, including the five reporters who worked for Al Jazeera, the Associated Press and Reuters, among other outlets.

Protesters hold placards and flags during a demonstration held by the London Freelance branch of the National Union of Journalists to honor journalists killed in Gaza, opposite Downing Street in London on Aug. 27, 2025. (AP)

The Israeli military said Tuesday its forces were targeting a camera operated by Hamas in the assault, which has triggered a wave of international condemnation.
It is the latest military action by Israel that has killed journalists, leading to accusations that they are being deliberately targeted.
The NUJ announced earlier this week that its members would join sister unions around the world in what it called ā€œ48 hours of solidarity action in support of journalists working in Gaza,ā€ which started Tuesday.
ā€œWe’re here to show solidarity, and to show that we are horrified as fellow journalists about what’s happening,ā€ said Deborah Hobson, a freelance journalist and NUJ member who helped organize the vigil and letter delivered to Starmer.
She called his center-left government’s response to the latest killings of journalists, as well as prior incidents, ā€œextremely poor.ā€
ā€œThere’s nothing that says that the UK is horrified,ā€ Hobson said.
ā€œWe have a prime minister who’s a human rights lawyer,ā€ she added, referring to Starmer’s career prior to entering politics.
ā€œWe expect better from a Labor government in any case, because of its historical reputation in terms of justice, equality.ā€

A photo of the letter protesters' letter from representatives of the London Freelance branch of the National Union of Journalists to the UK government on August 27, 2025. (AFP)

The UK government has in recent months suspended arms export licenses to Israel for use in Gaza, suspended free trade talks with Israel and sanctioned two far-right Israeli ministers in protest at Israel’s conduct of the war.
Last week, it was one of 27 countries to call on Israel to allow ā€œimmediate independent foreign media accessā€ into Gaza.
Mike Holderness, a writer and editor, said he had turned out ā€œto honor and remember our colleagues, as well as demanding the strongest measures of protectionā€ for journalists still working in Gaza and elsewhere.
ā€œThe vigil is to honor the memory of those who’ve given their lives to trying to report the truth.ā€


ā€˜More questions than answers:’ Media watchdog urges ā€˜complete, independent’ investigation into Israel’s killing of 5 journalists

ā€˜More questions than answers:’ Media watchdog urges ā€˜complete, independent’ investigation into Israel’s killing of 5 journalists
Updated 28 August 2025

ā€˜More questions than answers:’ Media watchdog urges ā€˜complete, independent’ investigation into Israel’s killing of 5 journalists

ā€˜More questions than answers:’ Media watchdog urges ā€˜complete, independent’ investigation into Israel’s killing of 5 journalists
  • Committee to Protect Journalists contested Israeli claims about the incident, calling them ā€˜incomplete’ and ā€˜inadequate’
  • ā€˜In not a single case over 24 years has anyone in Israel ever been held accountable for the killing of a journalist:’ CPJ CEO

LONDON: The Committee to Protect Journalists on Thursday called on Israeli authorities to guarantee a ā€œcompleteā€ and ā€œindependentā€ investigation into the killing of five journalists in Gaza.

Israel struck Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza Strip on Monday, killing at least 20 people, including five journalists who worked for Reuters, the Associated Press, Al Jazeera, and others.

Photojournalists Hossam Al-Masri, Mohammad Salama and Mariam Dagga, along with journalists Moaz Abu Taha and Ahmed Abu Aziz, died after an Israeli explosive drone targeted the medical complex.

ā€œIsrael’s initial report leaves many more questions than answers and does not explain why an Israeli tank fired on Reuters camera operator Hossam Al-Masri and the news agency’s visible, live-feed camera that had been filming from that location daily for several weeks,ā€ said CPJ CEO Jodie Ginsberg.

ā€œNor does it explain why first responders — including other journalists — were targeted in an apparent so-called ā€˜double tap’ strike on the same location. The indiscriminate and disproportionate nature of the attack demand that this incident be investigated as an apparent war crime.ā€

A ā€œdouble tapā€ is a controversial military tactic designed to maximize casualties by striking first responders such as medical personnel, rescue workers and journalists.

Reconstruction of the incident revealed that what was initially described as a second ā€œtapā€ was actually two almost simultaneous strikes, both fired nine minutes after the first. These subsequent impacts appear responsible for the majority of fatalities

Following global condemnation, the Israeli military stated the back-to-back strikes were ordered because soldiers believed militants were using the camera to observe Israeli forces. Israel has long asserted that Hamas and other militant groups take shelter in hospitals.

The military’s chief of general staff acknowledged ā€œgapsā€ in the investigation so far, including questions about the type of ammunition used to disable the camera. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the killing as a ā€œtragic mishap.ā€

CPJ contested these claims, calling Israel’s explanation ā€œincompleteā€ and ā€œinadequateā€ given the scale of the tragedy. The watchdog also highlighted inconsistencies in statements from the Israeli leadership, including those from Netanyahu and the Israel Defense Forces.

The group warned that the lack of transparency ā€œundermines Israel’s moral duty and obligations under international lawā€ to protect journalists, adding that the incident reflected a ā€œwider, deeply troubling pattern of lethal attacks on the media.ā€

ā€œOur experience over decades is that Israeli-led investigations into killings are neither transparent nor independent — and in not a single case over the past 24 years has anyone in Israel ever been held accountable for the killing of a journalist,ā€ Ginsberg said. ā€œWe demand a full, transparent and independent investigation to ensure accountability for this attack and any violations of international humanitarian law.ā€

The CPJ’s call for accountability comes amid a broader debate over the role of Western media during the Gaza conflict.

Reuters and the Associated Press have faced criticism for distancing themselves from the journalists killed by labeling them as contractors rather than employees — reflecting widespread contractual complexities in the industry. Critics argue this approach undermines the legitimacy of Palestinian journalists, who have endured a prolonged smear campaign by Israel.

Both agencies have also been accused of uncritically repeating Israeli justifications for the strike without sufficient challenge or contextualization. Fellow journalists have criticized the newswires for perceived hypocrisy, opportunism and bias.

Canadian photojournalist Valerie Zink resigned from Reuters after eight years, accusing the agency of ā€œbetraying journalists in Gazaā€ and ā€œenabling the systematic assassinationā€ of media workers. Zink stated she could no longer ā€œwear this press pass with anything but deep shame and griefā€ as international criticism intensifies over Western media’s perceived failure to hold Israel accountable for atrocities in Gaza.


Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google

Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google
Updated 28 August 2025

Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google

Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google
  • Contest aims to highlight the potential of AI in filmmaking, with creativity, realism, and storytelling among the core judging criteria
  • Entries will be evaluated on the storytelling quality, creative use of AI, technical execution, and the film’s ability to deliver a humanitarian message

DUBAI: Dubai has announced a $1 million award for short films generated entirely by artificial intelligence in collaboration with Google’s Gemini as part of the 1 Billion Followers Summit.

The winning short film will take home the grand prize, while the top 10 competing films will be screened during the fourth edition of the summit, set to take place in Dubai from Jan. 9 to 11, 2026.

In a statement on Wednesday, the UAE Media Government Office, which organizes the event, said the contest aims to highlight the potential of AI in filmmaking, with creativity, realism, and storytelling among the core judging criteria.

Submitted entries must be fully generated using AI tools, and will be evaluated on the quality of storytelling, creative use of AI, technical execution, and the film’s ability to deliver a humanitarian message.

Further details about the competition will be announced next month, the office added.

ā€œThe Summit aims to support and encourage the production of purposeful films using diverse AI tools, raise awareness of the humanitarian messages such films should convey, and enhance creative capabilities, aesthetic vision, and advanced skills in integrating AI into film production,ā€ the office said in a statement.

Organizers added that competition will focus on short films, given their powerful ability to deliver impactful messages to audiences.

UAE Minister of Cabinet Affairs Mohammad Al-Gergawi said the summit is part of the country’s efforts to help drive the ā€œcontent economy.ā€

He added: ā€œThe content economy is an economic power with limitless horizons. Today, the UAE is not only keeping pace with its developments but is also leading and charting new directions within that economy.ā€

As part of this, the UAE also allocated $13.6 million to fund creative projects by content creators. It will provide grants for projects with global cultural and economic impact and back joint ventures to establish companies led by content creators or creative tech developers. 

An additional $13.6 million has been dedicated to help startups and content creators pitch their ideas to top investors and companies, who will sponsor and invest in the most promising proposals.

Held under the theme ā€œContent for Good,ā€ the summit brings together top content creators, leading tech firms, industry experts, and entrepreneurs to foster global networking and empower creators with a supportive environment to scale and thrive internationally. The upcoming edition will feature 400 speakers with a combined following of over 3 billion followers.


US diplomat apologizes for using the word ā€˜animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters

US diplomat apologizes for using the word ā€˜animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters
Updated 28 August 2025

US diplomat apologizes for using the word ā€˜animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters

US diplomat apologizes for using the word ā€˜animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters
  • Barrack said he did not intend to use the word ā€œin a derogatory mannerā€ but that his comments had been ā€œinappropriateā€
  • At the start of a press conference at the presidential palace, journalists shouted at Barrack to move to the podium

BEIRUT: A US diplomat apologized Thursday for using the word ā€œanimalisticā€ while calling for a gaggle of reporters to quiet down during a press conference in Lebanon earlier this week.

Tom Barrack, who is the US ambassador to Turkiye and envoy to Syria and has also been on a temporary assignment in Lebanon, said he didn’t intend to use the word ā€œin a derogatory mannerā€ but that his comments had been ā€œinappropriate.ā€

Barrack visited Beirut along with a delegation of US officials on Tuesday to discuss efforts by the Lebanese government to disarm the Hezbollah militant group and implementation of the ceasefire agreement that ended the latest war between Israel and the Hezbollah in November.

At the start of a press conference at the presidential palace, journalists shouted at Barrack to move to the podium after he started speaking from another spot in the room. After taking the podium Barrack told the crowd of journalists to ā€œact civilized, act kind, act tolerant.ā€ He threatened to end the conference early otherwise.

ā€œThe moment that this starts becoming chaotic, like animalistic, we’re gone,ā€ said Barrack.

The comment sparked an outcry, with the Lebanese press syndicate calling for an apology and calling for a boycott of Barrack’s visits if none was issued. The Presidential Palace also issued a statement expressing regret for the comments made by ā€œone of our guestsā€ and thanking journalists for their ā€œhard work.ā€

In an interview with Mario Nawfal, a media personality on the X platform, an excerpt of which was published Thursday, Barrack said, ā€œAnimalistic was a word that I didn’t use in a derogatory manner, I was just saying ā€˜can we calm down, can we find some tolerance and kindness, let’s be civilized.’ But it was inappropriate to do when the media was just doing their job.ā€

He added, ā€œI should have been more generous with my time and more tolerant myself.ā€

Barrack’s visit came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israeli forces could begin withdrawing from territory they hold in southern Lebanon after the Lebanese government’s decided to disarm Hezbollah. When, how and in what order the Hezbollah disarmament in Israeli withdrawal would take place remain in dispute.

The Israeli army on Thursday launched airstrikes in southern Lebanon that it said were targeting ā€œterrorist infrastructure and a rocket platformā€ belonging to Hezbollah.