Al-Qaeda has executed Yemeni journalist abducted 9 years ago, says media watchdog
Al-Qaeda has executed Yemeni journalist abducted 9 years ago, says media watchdog/node/2585169/media
Al-Qaeda has executed Yemeni journalist abducted 9 years ago, says media watchdog
Black Al-Qaeda flag is sprayed on the wall of a damaged school in Taiz in 2017. (AP/File Photo)
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Updated 03 January 2025
Arab News
Al-Qaeda has executed Yemeni journalist abducted 9 years ago, says media watchdog
Mohamed Al-Maqri disappeared in the Arabian Peninsula while covering an anti-group protest in Al-Mukalla
Updated 03 January 2025
Arab News
LONDON: Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has executed Yemeni journalist Mohamed Al-Maqri after holding him captive for nine years, the Committee to Protect Journalists reported on Thursday.
Al-Maqri, a correspondent for the television channel Yemen Today, was abducted in 2015 while covering an anti-AQAP protest in Al-Mukalla, the capital of the southern governorate of Hadhramaut.
He was executed along with 10 other individuals after years of enforced disappearance.
âThe killing of Mohamed Al-Maqri highlights the extreme dangers Yemeni journalists face while reporting from one of the worldâs perilous conflict zones,â said Yeganeh Rezaian, CPJâs interim MENA (Middle East and North Africa) program coordinator.
âEnforced disappearances continue to endanger their lives.â
Rezaian condemned the act and called for accountability, urging all factions in Yemen to abandon such âabhorrent practices.â
The Yemeni Journalists Syndicate also condemned the execution, saying it was working with âthe relevant authorities to investigate the crime, prosecute the perpetrators, recover the journalistâs body, and deliver it to his family.â
Al-Maqri had been held incommunicado by AQAP since Oct. 12, 2015, following his abduction during the protest.
The group accused the individuals of âspying against the mujahedeen,â a label the group uses for its fighters.
His death underscores the increasing dangers for journalists operating in Yemen, where armed groups have targeted media professionals as part of broader efforts to suppress dissent and control narratives.
At least two other Yemeni journalists remain subjected to enforced disappearances, a practice characterized by abduction and the refusal to disclose a personâs fate or whereabouts.
Waheed Al-Sufi, the editor-in-chief of the independent newspaper Al-Arabiya, has been missing since April 2015 and is thought to be being held by the Houthi movement.
Naseh Shaker, who was last heard from on Nov. 19, 2024, is believed to be being held by the Southern Transitional Council, a secessionist organization in southern Yemen.
Yemen continues to rank among the deadliest countries for journalists, with armed conflict and factional violence leaving media workers vulnerable to abductions, disappearances, and killings.
Google hit with $425M fine in the US for invading usersâ privacy, $381M in France for a similar offense
US jury found the tech giant of guilty of violations by continuing to collect data for millions of users who had switched off a tracking feature in their Google account
France's data protection authority In Paris gives Google six months to ensure ads are no longer displayed between emails in Gmail usersâ inboxes without prior consent
Updated 04 September 2025
Reuters
SAN FRANCISCO/PARIS: Alphabetâs Google was told by a federal jury in the US on Wednesday to pay $425 million for invading usersâ privacy and slapped with a fine of 325 million euros ($381 million) in France for a similar offense.
The jury found the tech giant of guilty of violations by continuing to collect data for millions of users who had switched off a tracking feature in their Google account.
The verdict comes after a trial in the federal court in San Francisco over allegations that Google over an eight-year period accessed usersâ mobile devices to collect, save, and use their data, violating privacy assurances under its Web & App Activity setting.
The users had been seeking more than $31 billion in damages.
The jury found Google liable on two of the three claims of privacy violations brought by the plaintiffs. The jury found that Google had not acted with malice, meaning it was not entitled to any punitive damages.
A spokesperson for Google confirmed the verdict. Google had denied any wrongdoing.
The class action lawsuit, filed in July 2020, claimed Google continued to collect usersâ data even with the setting turned off through its relationship with apps such as Uber, Venmo and Metaâs Instagram that use certain Google analytics services.
At trial, Google said the collected data was ânonpersonal, pseudonymous, and stored in segregated, secured, and encrypted locations.â Google said the data was not associated with usersâ Google accounts or any individual userâs identity.
US District Judge Richard Seeborg certified the case as a class action covering about 98 million Google users and 174 million devices.
Google has faced other privacy lawsuits, including one earlier this year where it paid nearly $1.4 billion in a settlement with Texas over allegations the company violated the stateâs privacy laws.
Google in April 2024 agreed to destroy billions of data records of usersâ private browsing activities to settle a lawsuit that alleged it tracked people who thought they were browsing privately, including in âIncognitoâ mode.
Musa Al-Sadr family rejects BBCâs AI image claim in disappearance investigation
AI facial recognition analysis carried out by the BBC compared a 2011 photograph of a decomposed corpse from Tripoliâs Al-Zawiya hospital with archived images of Musa Al-Sadr, indicating a âhigh probabilityâ of resemblance
Leader of the Amal Movement, Al-Sadr disappeared on Aug. 31, 1978, in Libya alongside two companions, a week after they arrived to meet with then-Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi
Updated 03 September 2025
Arab News
LONDON: The family of the missing Lebanese cleric Imam Musa Al-Sadr has dismissed a recent BBC documentary that suggested he died in Libya, condemning the use of an artificial intelligence-generated image claimed to be him.
In a statement released Tuesday by the Imam Musa Al-Sadr Research and Studies Center, the family said the BBC shared the AI facial recognition analysis â a comparison between a decomposed corpse photo from Tripoliâs Al-Zawiya hospital in 2011 and archival images of Al-Sadr and relatives â with them and Lebanonâs official follow-up committee without consent.
âDuring filming, as the Imamâs family and the follow-up committee, we confirmed that the image is not of the Imam due to evident differences in the shape of the face, hair color, and other obvious distinctions,â the family said, adding that they had the confirmation âthe moment we saw the video clip.â
Al-Sadr, founder of the Amal Movement, disappeared on Aug. 31, 1978, in Libya alongside two companions, a week after they arrived to meet with Libyan government officials. They were last seen leaving a Tripoli hotel in a government vehicle.
Despite various claims, including Libyan assertions that he traveled to Rome â which have been widely disproved â his fate remains unknown.
Many Lebanese Shia believe that then-Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi ordered Al-Sadrâs killing, a claim that Libya has consistently denied.
The case has fueled deep political tensions between Lebanon and Libya and remains a highly sensitive and unresolved matter.
Some experts contend that Al-Sadr, an influential Iranian-Lebanese cleric, was on the verge of using his influence to guide Iran â and by extension the region â toward a more moderate path when he vanished on the eve of the Iranian revolution.
The BBC film, part of its Eye Investigations series, centers on testimony from Swedish-Lebanese reporter Kassem Hamade, who during the uprising of the Arab Spring in 2011 claimed to have photographed a tall corpse in a secret Tripoli morgue resembling Al-Sadr. He argued that despite decomposition, the skin tone, hair and facial features the dead body still resembled Sadrâs â who stood at 1.98 meters.
He also took a hair sample reportedly handed to the office of Lebanese parliamentary speaker, Nabih Berri, but officials later said that he sample was lost due to a âtechnical error.â
With what the family described as âfull cooperationâ with the BBC by providing photos, documents and resources, the outlets submitted Hamadeâs photograph for AI analysis.
According to Professor Ugail, the software indicated a âhigh probabilityâ that the body was either Al-Sadr or a close relative, a claim firmly denied by Al-Sadrâs family.
His son, Sayyed Sadreddine Sadr, said the 2011 morgue photograph was âevident(ly)â not his father.
âIt also contradicts the information we have after this date ⊠that he is still alive, held in a Libyan jail,â he said â though no evidence was ever offered to support this claim.
To address further questions, Judge Hassan Shami, representing the official committee and the family, is scheduled to appear on BBC Arabic to provide clarification.
ChatGPT to get parental controls after teenâs death
Parents Matthew and Maria Raine have filed a lawsuit alleging that a chatbot helped their 16-year-old son steal vodka and provided instructions for a noose he used to take his own life
OpenAI announced new safety tools, including age-appropriate response controls and notifications for detecting acute distress in children
Updated 04 September 2025
AFP
PARIS: American artificial intelligence firm OpenAI said Tuesday it would add parental controls to its chatbot ChatGPT, a week after an American couple said the system encouraged their teenaged son to kill himself.
âWithin the next month, parents will be able to... link their account with their teenâs accountâ and âcontrol how ChatGPT responds to their teen with age-appropriate model behavior rules,â the generative AI company said in a blog post.
Parents will also receive notifications from ChatGPT âwhen the system detects their teen is in a moment of acute distress,â OpenAI added.
Matthew and Maria Raine argue in a lawsuit filed last week in a California state court that ChatGPT cultivated an intimate relationship with their son Adam over several months in 2024 and 2025 before he took his own life.
The lawsuit alleges that in their final conversation on April 11, 2025, ChatGPT helped 16-year-old Adam steal vodka from his parents and provided technical analysis of a noose he had tied, confirming it âcould potentially suspend a human.â
Adam was found dead hours later, having used the same method.
âWhen a person is using ChatGPT it really feels like theyâre chatting with something on the other end,â said attorney Melodi Dincer of The Tech Justice Law Project, which helped prepare the legal complaint.
âThese are the same features that could lead someone like Adam, over time, to start sharing more and more about their personal lives, and ultimately, to start seeking advice and counsel from this product that basically seems to have all the answers,â Dincer said.
Product design features set the scene for users to slot a chatbot into trusted roles like friend, therapist or doctor, she said.
Dincer said the OpenAI blog post announcing parental controls and other safety measures seemed âgenericâ and lacking in detail.
âItâs really the bare minimum, and it definitely suggests that there were a lot of (simple) safety measures that could have been implemented,â she added.
âItâs yet to be seen whether they will do what they say they will do and how effective that will be overall.â
The Rainesâ case was just the latest in a string that have surfaced in recent months of people being encouraged in delusional or harmful trains of thought by AI chatbots â prompting OpenAI to say it would reduce modelsâ âsycophancyâ toward users.
âWe continue to improve how our models recognize and respond to signs of mental and emotional distress,â OpenAI said Tuesday.
The company said it had further plans to improve the safety of its chatbots over the coming three months, including redirecting âsome sensitive conversations... to a reasoning modelâ that puts more computing power into generating a response.
âOur testing shows that reasoning models more consistently follow and apply safety guidelines,â OpenAI said.
CNN launches new series spotlighting global trends and innovation
âSeasonsâ explores evolving tastes shaping global culture across fashion, travel, food, technology, design and art
First season focusing on Japanâs cultural influence debuts on Sept. 6
Updated 03 September 2025
Arab News
LONDON: CNN announced on Wednesday the launch of Seasons, a new series exploring shifting trends shaping global culture across fashion, travel, food, technology, design and art.
The series will highlight some of the worldâs most sought-after products and experiences, going behind the brands to examine the craftsmanship, innovation and strategies driving demand.
Ellana Lee, CNNâs group senior vice president and global head of productions, said that Seasons aimed to capture âwhatâs resonating right now,â reflecting evolving tastes that prioritize rarity, relevance and storytelling.
âEncapsulating the trends sweeping the world, audiences can stay up-to-date through short video explainers of whatâs capturing the moment or enjoy a beautiful, in-depth TV show.â
Hosted by Japanese model and creative director, Hikari Mori, the first season focuses on Japanâs cultural influence, blending its pop art heritage with traditional crafts that have found a place in luxury fashion.
Early episodes will explore the art of haiku, local food culture and traditional fabrics and materials, as well as an interview with Japanese pop artist Takashi Murakami and an exclusive visit to his Tokyo studio.
The series includes short video explainers designed for social media alongside a deeper 30-minute show premiering on Sept. 6 on CNN International.
LONDON: Itâs not every day that an Excel spreadsheet possesses the power to shock. But the stark clarity of the constantly updated document recording the names of every journalist killed in Gaza since October 2023 brings home the sheer scale of Israelâs unprecedented killing of journalists.
As of Sunday, 198 journalists have been killed in Gaza over the past two years. Since the beginning of the war, each name and the date and place of their death have been faithfully documented by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists.
Scrolling through the CPJâs Excel document, with its clean, neat rows and columns that somehow emphasize the chaos and suffering to which they attest, is akin to visiting a digital wall of remembrance.
And more than that, with the credentials of each journalist on the list and the details of their death verified by the CPJ, it constitutes evidence.
The first death recorded was that of Ibrahim Marzouq, a Palestinian media worker for the logistics department of the Gaza Bureau of the Palestinian Authority-run broadcaster Palestine Today TV.
A combination image shows the journalists killed in Israeli strikes on Nasser hospital in the south of the Gaza Strip on August 25, 2025. (Reuters)
Marzouq and his family were killed in an Israeli airstrike on his home in Gazaâs Al-Tuffah neighborhood on Oct. 24, 2023, just weeks after the conflict began in the wake of the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack.
The most recent victims were the five journalists killed on Aug. 25, along with more than a dozen civilians and health workers, by what appeared to be three tank shells on Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis.
Ahed Abu Aziz, Hussam Al-Masri, Mariam Dagga, Mohammed Salama, and Moaz Abu Taha worked for international outlets including Middle East Eye, the Associated Press, Al Jazeera, and Reuters.
Reuters said it had notified the Israel Defense Forces of the whereabouts of its cameraman, Al-Masri, prior to the attack, but this was not enough to protect him.
Aged 49, he is survived by his wife and their four children, who are living in a tent and, like everyone else in Gaza, struggling to find food.
Family and relatives mourn over the body of Palestinian journalist Ahmed Al-Shayah, covered with a press vest, after he was killed during an Israeli strike the previous night in Khan Yunis, at Nasser Hospital, in the southern Gaza Strip, on January 16, 2025. (AFP)
The UN human rights office said the killings âshould shock the world, not into stunned silence, but into action, demanding accountability and justice.â
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the attack as âa mishap.â Meanwhile, the IDF said it had launched an internal investigation, adding that it âregrets any harm to uninvolved individuals and does not target journalists as such.â
The CPJ has submitted a series of questions about the attack to the IDF and is calling for an independent investigation.
As Jodie Ginsberg, CEO of the CPJ, said in a statement on Aug. 28: âOur experience over decades is that Israeli-led investigations into killings are neither transparent, nor independent â 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.â
The CPJ, an independent, non-profit organization that was founded in 1981 by a group of US correspondents to promote press freedom worldwide, works to âdefend the right of journalists to report the news safely and without fear of reprisal.â
Al-Jazeera correspondent Anas Al-Sharif reports near the Arab Ahli (Baptist) Hospital in Gaza City on October 10, 2024. (AFP)
It has its work cut out. In August alone, it was dealing with dozens of cases worldwide, highlighting and advocating for individual journalists facing investigations, arrests and attacks in countries including Nigeria, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Somaliland, Kazakhstan, Madagascar, Iraq and Ethiopia.
But what it has been bearing witness to in Gaza for the past two years is beyond anything in its four decades of experience.
Despite Israelâs attempts to smear the journalists it has killed, suggesting some of them were Hamas operatives, âthey were all journalists,â Sara Qudah, the CPJâs Middle East and North Africa regional director, told Arab News.
âThey studied journalism and then graduated, just like any normal person anywhere, and worked for various media outlets.â
CPJ vets and confirms the credentials of every journalist who is killed before reporting and documenting their deaths. Of the dead to date, 65 were freelancers and 124 were staffers working for a wide range of organizations inside and outside the Palestinian territories.
Mourners carry the body of one of five journalists killed in an Israeli strike on Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip, during their funeral on August 25, 2025. (AFP)
Twenty-three of the victims were women.
Ever since the war in Gaza began, said Qudah, âthe international media and the international community took a decision to turn a blind eye to what the local media and the journalists are seeing and saying, and the footage they are sending. They have preferred to believe the official narrative from Israel and the Israeli media.
âBut after what happened in August, thereâs no way that the international community and the international media can deny what is happening on the ground. We are starting to see and hear more voices, more condemnation, asking for accountability.â
She paid tribute to the courage of Gazaâs journalists.
âItâs not only courage; itâs a sense of responsibility. They know that if they stop reporting, the truth will die and no one will know what is happening, no one will document what is happening on the ground.
Palestinians gather outside Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on August 25, 2025, following Israeli strikes. (AFP)
âThis is part of being a journalist, to be a witness to the truth, and this is why itâs so important for them to do that, even if it costs them their life, because at the end of the day they need to make sure that their deaths and the deaths of their loved ones is not is not happening for nothing.â
Journalists often find themselves reporting from war zones, perhaps for a few weeks at a time before travelling home again. But Gazaâs journalists âare documenting a war that they are living. On a daily basis, they are living this war.
âYou are going back to a tent. You are displaced. You donât have food, and you are afraid of being killed at any point, and you are also afraid that your family and your loved ones and your colleagues will be targeted and killed.â
There is, she said, no doubt that journalists are being targeted deliberately by Israel, which refuses to allow foreign journalists into Gaza.
âThis is why Israel is killing them, because they want to kill their witnesses and they want to hide the truth, to hide the evidence.
âBut one day, justice has to happen, and it will happen thanks to these journalists, the witnesses who are documenting all of Israelâs war crimes.â