ֱ

US NGO believes missing journalist Austin Tice ‘alive’ in Syria

US NGO believes missing journalist Austin Tice ‘alive’ in Syria
Marc and Debra Tice, the parents of US journalist Austin Tice, who was abducted in Syria more than six years ago, give a press conference in the Lebanese capital Beirut on December 4, 2018. (File/AFP)
Short Url
Updated 24 December 2024

US NGO believes missing journalist Austin Tice ‘alive’ in Syria

US NGO believes missing journalist Austin Tice ‘alive’ in Syria
  • Zakka showed an image he said indicated the locations where Tice had been held from November 2017 to February 2024.

DAMASCUS: US group Hostage Aid Worldwide said Tuesday that it believes journalist Austin Tice, who went missing in Syria in 2012, is still alive, though it did not offer concrete information on his whereabouts.
“We have data that Austin is alive till January 2024, but the president of the US said in August that he is alive, and we are sure that he is alive today,” Hostage Aid Worldwide’s Nizar Zakka said.
“We are trying to be as transparent as possible and to share as much information as possible.”
At a press conference in Damascus, Zakka showed an image he said indicated the locations where Tice had been held from November 2017 to February 2024.
Hostage Aid Worldwide says it is working with Tice’s family and the US authorities.
Tice, 43, was working for Agence France-Presse, McClatchy News, The Washington Post, CBS and other media outlets in Syria.
He went missing near Damascus in August 2012.
The authorities under ousted president Bashar Assad never said they had him in custody.
Tice’s mother Debra said earlier this month that she had information that her son was alive, while Syria’s new leadership said it was searching for him.
Hostage Aid Worldwide also said it believed senior cleric Yohanna Ibrahim, a Syrian-American dual citizen, had been held by Assad’s government.
The group did not elaborate on whether it believed Ibrahim was still alive.
“He is a US citizen,” Zakka said, adding that Ibrahim “was seen in 2018 in Branch 291” of the security forces.
The senior Aleppo cleric of the Syriac Orthodox Church was kidnapped in April 2013.
Assad’s government had claimed that Ibrahim was kidnapped by jihadists.


2 Yemeni writers disappear amid Houthi crackdown on media

2 Yemeni writers disappear amid Houthi crackdown on media
Updated 30 September 2025

2 Yemeni writers disappear amid Houthi crackdown on media

2 Yemeni writers disappear amid Houthi crackdown on media
  • Yemeni journalist Majed Zayed and writer Oras Al-Iryani reportedly disappeared in Sanaa days before Sept. 26 Revolution Day

LONDON: Yemeni journalist Majed Zayed and writer Oras Al-Iryani have reportedly disappeared in Sanaa, in what rights groups have condemned as part of an escalating Houthi clampdown on media freedom.

Zayed, who contributes to independent outlets including Nafzet Al-Yemen, Almawqea Post, and Mda Press, was abducted late on Sept. 23 while leaving a medical center in the Yemeni capital.

His disappearance followed a patriotic Facebook post celebrating the Yemeni flag ahead of the Sept. 26 Revolution Day, an anniversary not recognized by Houthi authorities.

Just a day prior, Al-Iryani — a poet and essayist — was last seen after leaving his home at sunset, his phone switched off and his Facebook page deleted within hours.

Both men remain missing, and advocacy groups have directly linked their disappearances to the Houthi escalation against media and free expression as Revolution Day approached.

Civil society group SAM Organization for Rights and Liberties described these acts as “systematic efforts to suppress opinion and limit civic participation.”

The Committee to Protect Journalists echoed calls for their safe release, condemning the arrests as “another example of the Houthi rebel group exploiting politicized moments to intensify their crackdown on the press.”

The latest disappearances are part of a broader campaign against writers, journalists, and activists in Houthi-controlled territories ahead of national celebrations.

Rights monitors warn this is an attempt to erase a significant historical milestone from Yemen’s collective memory.

Earlier in September, the Houthi-run Ministry of Interior issued a warning about alleged hostile plots threatening national stability, mirroring last year’s campaign of arrests targeting aid workers and critics, including journalist Mohammed Al-Miyahi, who is still in detention.


Hyperfusion, CAMB.AI to bring multilingual voice AI infrastructure to MENA

Hyperfusion, CAMB.AI to bring multilingual voice AI infrastructure to MENA
Updated 30 September 2025

Hyperfusion, CAMB.AI to bring multilingual voice AI infrastructure to MENA

Hyperfusion, CAMB.AI to bring multilingual voice AI infrastructure to MENA
  • New platform allows data and workloads to remain in-country, addressing privacy and regulatory concerns

LONDON: Hyperfusion, a UAE-based artificial intelligence cloud provider, and AI-driven speech and translation tech company CAMB.AI announced Tuesday a partnership to offer locally hosted, real-time voice AI and agent services for organizations across the Middle East and North Africa.

The move is the industry’s latest effort to enhance technological sovereignty in the region.

The two companies said the platform brings together CAMB.AI’s speech-to-speech, text-to-speech, and live translation capabilities, now running on Hyperfusion’s GPU cloud in the UAE.

The system supports over 100 languages, including Arabic dialects, and is designed to help businesses and media companies deploy voice agents and broadcast-grade translation tools with low-latency and regional compliance.

Executives said the new partnership allows data and workloads to remain in-country, addressing privacy and regulatory concerns.

Quentin Reyes, CEO of Hyperfusion, said the initiative aims to elevate AI offerings in the region, saying enterprises in the Gulf Cooperation Council region “don’t just want AI — they want trusted, sovereign AI that can power real products.

“With CAMB.AI, we’re giving builders in the region a voice and agent layer that is multilingual, low-latency, and compliant — so they can launch at scale, here.”

Building on CAMB.AI’s MARS7 text-to-speech model, the agent infrastructure offers features like barge-in, multilingual turn-taking, and support for conversational enterprise workflows.

The platform can be used for tasks ranging from customer service agents and field-ops assistants to media streaming and live commentary.

Organizations can access application programming interfaces for real-time workflows, voice controls, and deployment modes ranging from single-tenant to on-prem edge solutions. Monitoring tools provide analytics on latency and usage.

CAMB.AI recently partnered with Arab News to make the newspaper’s content accessible in over 50 languages.

CTO Akshat Prakash said the integration is intended to help regional developers and companies reduce language barriers while maintaining control over data and performance.


YouTube to pay $22 million in settlement with Trump

YouTube to pay $22 million in settlement with Trump
Updated 30 September 2025

YouTube to pay $22 million in settlement with Trump

YouTube to pay $22 million in settlement with Trump
  • The settlement will go toward Trump’s latest construction project at the White House

NEW YORK: YouTube has agreed to pay $22 million to settle a lawsuit filed by President Donald Trump after it suspended his account over the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol, according to a court document released Monday.
The online video platform, a Google subsidiary, is the latest Big Tech firm to settle with Trump after he went to court in July 2021 over his suspension.
Major platforms removed Trump at the time due to concerns he would promote further violence with bogus claims that voter fraud caused his loss to former president Joe Biden in 2020.
The 79-year-old Republican took social media companies and YouTube to court, claiming he was wrongfully censored.
The settlement will go toward Trump’s latest construction project at the White House, through a nonprofit called Trust for the National Mall, which is “dedicated to restoring, preserving, and elevating the National Mall, to support the construction of the White House State Ballroom,” per the filing.
Trump’s posting privileges were curbed after more than 140 police officers were injured in hours of clashes with pro-Trump rioters wielding flagpoles, baseball bats, hockey sticks and other makeshift weapons, along with Tasers and canisters of bear spray.
In February, Elon Musk’s X settled for about $10 million, in a lawsuit against the company and its former chief executive Jack Dorsey.
In January, days after Trump’s inauguration, Meta agreed to pay $25 million to settle the 79-year-old Republican’s complaint, with $22 million of the payment going toward funding Trump’s future presidential library.
Parent company Alphabet reported the online video platform’s ad sales alone accounted for more than $36 billion in revenue in 2024, per its 2025 annual report filed to the US Securities and Exchange Commission.


Rights groups, activists urge Microsoft to cut all military ties with Israel after partial service suspension

Rights groups, activists urge Microsoft to cut all military ties with Israel after partial service suspension
Updated 27 September 2025

Rights groups, activists urge Microsoft to cut all military ties with Israel after partial service suspension

Rights groups, activists urge Microsoft to cut all military ties with Israel after partial service suspension
  • Tech giant halts Israeli access to some technologies linked to mass surveillance of Palestinians
  • Campaign group steps up protests against Microsoft, demanding a ‘digital arms embargo’

LONDON: Human rights groups and activists welcomed Microsoft’s suspension of Israeli military access to some technologies linked to mass surveillance of Palestinians, urging the company to go further and end all contracts with Israel.

The decision, announced by Microsoft President Brad Smith on Thursday, followed an investigation by The Guardian, +972 Magazine, and Local Call, which revealed that Unit 8200, Israel’s spy agency, used Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform to store and process vast amounts of Palestinian phone calls in Gaza and the West Bank as part of a mass surveillance program.

Microsoft said it acted after reviewing the reports and had blocked the unit’s access to some cloud storage and AI services.

Agnes Callamard, secretary-general of Amnesty International, urged the tech giant to investigate all its other dealings with the Israeli military to ensure they do not contribute to Israel’s “human rights violations against Palestinians.”

She urged other tech companies to suspend similar technology and military sales and called for accountability as Israel’s campaign in Gaza continues to cause mass civilian casualties, displacement and famine.

“There must be an end to the impunity that Israel has enjoyed and flouted,” said Callamard, urging states to “live up to their legal obligations toward bringing Israel’s genocide.”

The worker-led “No Azure for Apartheid” campaign group, which has lately escalated protests against Microsoft for its ties with Israel, welcomed the partial suspension but said it was “insufficient.”

The group reiterated its call for a complete suspension of Microsoft’s ties with the Israeli military and vowed to continue protests until that demand is met.

“We know that this is not enough,” Hossam Nasr, one of the group’s organizers, told Arab News.

“Microsoft has only disabled a small subset of services to only one unit in the Israeli military. The vast majority of Microsoft’s contract with the Israeli military remains intact.”

He said continuing ties with the military while it carries out its relentless campaign in Gaza is “unconscionable and morally indefensible for Microsoft.”

Nasr, a former Microsoft employee who was fired last year for holding an “unauthorized” vigil for Palestinian victims of Gaza, was one of seven protesters arrested after staging a a sit-in at the office of the Microsoft president in Washington. He said Microsoft’s suspension of some cloud services to Unit 8200, one month after the sit-in and repeated protests, demonstrated that the company had yielded to pressure.

Nasr said that although Microsoft’s response was “inadequate,” it marked the first instance of a US technology company halting the sale of certain services to the Israeli military “since the start of Gaza genocide.”

The campaign group, which gathered over 2,000 signatures from Microsoft employees and held demonstrations outside the company’s Washington headquarters last month, described its demand as part of a broader push for a “digital arms embargo” in parallel with weapons embargoes being imposed by governments worldwide.

In his official statement on Thursday, Smith said investigations were continuing.

Despite the suspension, he said that the company will continue to provide cybersecurity support to Israel and regional partners under existing agreements.


Nexstar and Sinclair bring Jimmy Kimmel’s show back to local TV stations

Nexstar and Sinclair bring Jimmy Kimmel’s show back to local TV stations
Updated 27 September 2025

Nexstar and Sinclair bring Jimmy Kimmel’s show back to local TV stations

Nexstar and Sinclair bring Jimmy Kimmel’s show back to local TV stations

LOS ANGELES: Nexstar Media Group joined Sinclair Broadcast Group in bringing Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night talk show back to its local TV stations on Friday night, ending a dayslong TV blackout for dozens of cities across the US
The companies suspended the program on Sept. 17 over remarks the comedian made in the wake of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s killing. Disney-owned ABC suspended Kimmel the same day, following threats of potential repercussions from the Trump-appointed head of the Federal Communications Commission.
The move Friday means “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” will return to local TV on Nexstar’s 28 ABC affiliates, from Topeka, Kansas, to New Orleans, along with Sinclair’s 38 local markets, from Seattle to Washington D.C.
Kimmel’s suspension lasted less than a week, while the affiliate blackout stood for just over a week.
When the boycott began, Sinclair, which is known for its conservative political content, called on Kimmel to apologize to Kirk’s family. Taking it a step further, the company asked him to “make a meaningful personal donation” to Turning Point USA, the nonprofit that Kirk founded.
On the day Kirk was killed, Kimmel shared a message of support for Kirk’s family and other victims of gun violence on social media, which he reiterated during his Tuesday return to ABC. He had also called the conservative activist’s assassination a “senseless murder” prior to being taken off air.
Kimmel’s original comments didn’t otherwise focus on Kirk. He instead lambasted President Donald Trump and his administration’s response to the killing. On his first show back Tuesday, the comedian did not apologize, but did say “it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man” and acknowledged that to some, his comments “felt either ill-timed or unclear or maybe both.”
He also used a blend of humor and pointed messages to emphasize the importance of free speech.
Maryland-based Sinclair and Texas-based Nexstar continued to preempt the show for three days even after ABC and Disney returned it to national airwaves.
New episodes of the show air Monday through Thursday. Friday night’s rerun will be of Tuesday’s show — so viewers of Sinclair stations can see Kimmel’s emotional return to the air. Viewers will have to wait until Monday to get the host’s take on the latest moves.
In its statement Friday, Sinclair pointed to its “responsibility as local broadcasters to provide programming that serves the interests of our communities, while also honoring our obligations to air national network programming.”
The company added that it had received “thoughtful feedback from viewers, advertisers and community leaders,” and noticed “troubling acts of violence,” referencing the shooting into the lobby of a Sacramento station.
Sinclair said its proposals to Disney to strengthen accountability, feedback and dialogue and appoint an ombudsman had not yet been adopted.
In a similar statement Friday, Nexstar said it appreciated Disney’s approach to its concerns and that it “remains committed to protecting the First Amendment” while airing content that is “in the best interest of the communities we serve.”
Both companies said their decisions were not affected by influence from government or anyone else.
Disney representatives declined comment.
As a result of Sinclair and Nexstar’s boycott, viewers in cities representing roughly a quarter of ABC’s local TV affiliates had been left without the late-night program on local TV. The blackouts escalated nationwide uproar around First Amendment protections — particularly as the Trump administration and other conservatives police speech after Kirk’s killing. They also cast a spotlight on political influence in the media landscape, with critics lambasting companies that they accuse of censoring content.
Ahead of his suspension, Kimmel took aim at the president and his “MAGA gang” of supporters for their response to Kirk’s killing, which Kimmel said included “finger-pointing” and attempts to characterize the alleged shooter as “anything other than one of them.”
These remarks angered many supporters of Kirk — as well as FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, who accused Kimmel of appearing to “directly mislead the American public” with his remarks about the man accused of the killing. Ahead of Kimmel’s suspension, Carr warned that Disney and ABC’s local affiliates could face repercussions if the comedian was not punished.
He later applauded Sinclair and Nexstar, for their decisions to preempt the show.
Sinclair Vice Chairman Jason Smith on the day the blackout began called Kimmel’s comments “inappropriate and deeply insensitive” and said that ABC’s suspension wasn’t enough. Smith added that Sinclair appreciated Carr’s comments — and called for “immediate regulatory action.”
While local TV affiliates broadcast their own programming, such as local news, they also contract with larger national broadcasters — and pay them to air their national content, splitting advertising revenue and fees from cable companies.
Matthew Dolgin, senior equity analyst at research firm Morningstar, said he wasn’t surprised by Kimmel’s return to the local stations.
“The relationship with Disney is far too important for these firms to risk,” Dolgin said. And setting aside legal rights from either side, he added, “Disney would’ve been free to take its affiliate agreements elsewhere in 2026 if these relationships were too difficult. That scenario would be devastating to Nexstar and Sinclair.”