Snap Inc. opens office in Qatar/node/2620567/media
Snap Inc. opens office in Qatar
Opening was attended by Snap Inc. founder and CEO Evan Spiegel, and Sheikh Jassim bin Mansour bin Jabor Al-Thani, director of Qatar’s Government Communications Office, among others. (Supplied)
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Arab News
Snap Inc. opens office in Qatar
Move aimed at advancing Qatar’s digital transformation and creator ecosystem, Snap said
Updated 6 min 7 sec ago
Arab News
DUBAI: Snap Inc. has opened a new office in Qatar located in Doha’s Msheireb district.
The opening was attended by Snap Inc. founder and CEO Evan Spiegel, and Sheikh Jassim bin Mansour bin Jabor Al-Thani, director of Qatar’s Government Communications Office, among others.
The expansion underscores Snap’s “long-term investment in the region’s digital economy” and aims to advance Qatar’s digital transformation and creator ecosystem, according to a company statement.
It “represents an important step in strengthening our strategic partnership, which began three years ago and has already achieved significant milestones, particularly in development, training, and support for the creative industry,” Al-Thani said.
Earlier this year, the company signed a memorandum of understanding with Qatar’s GCO to launch the first-ever AR Academy in the Middle East and North Africa region. The groundwork has been laid for the initiative, which will soon open to young aspiring creators across the region.
“With this new office, we’re deepening our roots in a market that celebrates creativity and culture, and reaffirming our commitment to empowering creators, partners, and businesses to unlock new opportunities within Qatar’s rapidly evolving digital ecosystem,” said Hussein Freijeh, vice president of Snap Inc. in MENA.
The Gulf region is among the most technologically advanced regions in the world, with users opening Snapchat more than 45 times a day on average and around 85 percent engaging daily with AR experiences, according to Snap Inc.
Musk launches Grokipedia to rival ‘left-biased’ Wikipedia
The launch came with the promise of a newer version 1.0, which Musk said would be “10X better” than the current live site, which he claimed is already “better than Wikipedia”
Musk has been a regular critic of Wikipedia, in 2024, he accused the site of being “controlled by far-left activists” and called for donations to the platform to cease
Updated 28 October 2025
AFP
NEW YORK: Elon Musk’s company xAI launched Grokipedia on Monday to compete with online encyclopedia Wikipedia, which he has accused of ideological bias.
The site dubbed version 0.1 had more than 885,000 articles by Monday evening, compared to Wikipedia’s more than seven million in English.
The launch came with the promise of a newer version 1.0, which Musk said would be “10X better” than the current live site, which he claimed is already “better than Wikipedia.”
“The goal of Grok and Grokipedia.com is the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. We will never be perfect, but we shall nonetheless strive toward that goal,” he said on X following the launch.
Grokipedia’s release had been marked down for the end of September, but was delayed by the US entrepreneur to “purge out the propaganda,” Musk said in a separate X post.
Musk has been a regular critic of Wikipedia. In 2024, he accused the site of being “controlled by far-left activists” and called for donations to the platform to cease.
In August, he said “Wikipedia cannot be used as a definitive source for Community Notes, as the editorial control there is extremely left-biased.”
The content of Grokipedia is generated by artificial intelligence (AI) and the generative AI assistant Grok.
A Grokipedia article dedicated to Musk states that the Tesla and SpaceX CEO has “influenced broader debates on technological progress, demographic decline, and institutional biases, often via X,” amid what the page says are “criticisms from legacy media outlets that exhibit systemic left-leaning tilts in coverage.”
Created in 2001, Wikipedia is a collaborative encyclopedia managed by volunteers, largely funded by donations, and whose pages can be written or edited by Internet users.
It claims a “neutral point of view” in its content.
AFP has reached out to Wikipedia for comment.
RSF detains Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim in El-Fasher
Ibrahim was among the few journalists still documenting events from inside the city during 18-month siege
A video that first circulated on RSF social media groups on Sunday showed Ibrahim surrounded by RSF fighters
Updated 27 October 2025
Arab News
LONDON: Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim was detained by the Rapid Support Forces on Sunday as the paramilitary group consolidated its advance in El-Fasher, the besieged capital of North Darfur.
Ibrahim, a freelance reporter and regular contributor to Al Jazeera Mubasher, was taken into custody just hours after the RSF announced it had seized control of the city, the last remaining Sudanese military stronghold in Darfur, which became the center of fighting in recent months as the RSF sought to consolidate control over the vast western region.
Described by fellow colleagues as “the last voice of Darfur,” Ibrahim was among the few journalists still documenting events from inside El-Fasher amid relentless airstrikes, a communications blackout, and a dire humanitarian situation that left over 200,000 civilians trapped since the onset of the RSF siege in April 2024.
A video that first circulated on RSF social media groups on Sunday showed Ibrahim surrounded by RSF fighters, identifying himself and confirming that he had been detained while attempting to leave the city.
In the clip, Ibrahim declares he is a neutral journalist, with loyalties to neither the Sudanese Armed Forces nor the RSF.
The Sudanese Journalists Syndicate and the Sudanese online community have called on the RSF to release him and said they will hold the RSF accountable for any harm done to Ibrahim.
Ataf Mohamed, editor-in-chief of local independent newspaper Al-Sudani, called on the international community “to take all necessary measures to secure his release.
“Muammar was only reporting the stark realities and tragic conditions faced by El-Fasher’s citizens, enduring hunger, thirst, death, and siege. Journalism is not a crime,” he said.
نحمل ميليشيا الدعم السريع وظهيرها السياسي (تأسيس) المسؤولية الكاملة عن سلامة الزميل الصحفي معمر إبراهيم، الذي اعتقلته الميليشيا أثناء محاولته الخروج من مدينة الفاشر.
ونلفت نظر الأمم المتحدة والاتحاد الأفريقي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان والولايات المتحدة الأمريكية التي يوجد بها وفد…
— Ataf Mohamed عطاف محمد (@atafmohamed3)
The Committee to Protect Journalists’ regional director, Sara Qudah, also called for his release on Monday, saying that Ibrahim’s abduction “exposes the group (RSF)’s blatant disregard for press freedom and human rights. It demonstrates the extreme dangers reporters continue to face in El-Fasher.”
Ibrahim’s detention coincided with intense fighting across El-Fasher and reports that the RSF had seized the Sudanese Armed Forces’ 6th Division base, its final stronghold in the region.
Medical groups reported dozens of civilians killed and the destruction of healthcare infrastructure during renewed violence in the city, where hundreds of thousands remain besieged and have endured severe deprivation for more than a year.
Sudan has been mired in conflict since April 2023, when longstanding tensions between the RSF and the military erupted into full-scale war.
The fighting has since claimed over 140,000 lives and created the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with nearly 14 million people displaced — many forced to flee Sudan altogether.
‘Continued to be on my conscience nonstop’: US officials split on Israel’s killing of journalist Shireen Abu Akleh
Israeli sniper knew he was targeting journalists, says former officer
Steve Gabavics claims US ‘soft-pedaled’ to appease Israeli regime
Updated 27 October 2025
Arab News
LONDON: US officials remain deeply divided over the 2022 killing by Israel of Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh in the West Bank, with new revelations suggesting the State Department delivered an “equivocal assessment” intentionally, and “soft-pedaled to appease Israel,” The New York Times reported on Monday.
Abu Akleh, a celebrated Al Jazeera journalist, was shot while wearing a blue press vest as she covered an Israeli raid in the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank.
Though initial Israeli statements blamed Palestinian gunmen, the regime’s military — under intense pressure from the international community — later acknowledged that she was very likely shot by an Israeli soldier who “misidentified” her.
Col. Steve Gabavics, a retired US military policeman involved in the investigation, told the NYT he was certain the Israeli sniper knew he was targeting a journalist — even if not Abu Akleh specifically.
Based on military radio records, the journalists’ visible location, and the precision of the shots, Gabavics stressed the evidence strongly pointed to a deliberate act.
Gabavics said he clashed with his then-superior, Lt. Gen. Michael R. Fenzel, over whether the shooting was intentional.
He was ultimately sidelined, and the US report stopped short of calling the killing deliberate.
Gabavics said that he and his colleagues “were just flabbergasted that this is what they put out,” adding that the decision by the US not to call it intentional “continued to be on my conscience nonstop.”
“The favoritism is always toward the Israelis. Very little of that goes to the Palestinians,” he said of his experience working in the office.
The official US review concluded that “gunfire from IDF (Israeli Defence Forces) positions was likely responsible for the death of Shireen Abu Akleh” but “found no reason to believe this was intentional, but rather the result of tragic circumstances.”
However, NYT sources said that based on evidence gathered the intent was clear but softened for political reasons.
Fenzel maintained in statements to the NYT that investigators lacked “sufficient evidence” to prove intent, insisting he “stands by the integrity” of the work and the final conclusions.
Abu Akleh’s killing sparked global condemnation and renewed debate about the targeting of Palestinian journalists, an issue acutely highlighted during Tel Aviv’s war on Gaza.
Multiple independent inquiries — including those by the NYT, UN, and other organizations — have largely contradicted Israeli and US official assessments, pointing to evidence of a deliberate shooting.
Earlier this year, a documentary from American network Zeteo reportedly identified the Israeli soldier responsible for the fatal shot — who was later killed by a roadside bomb in Jenin in 2024.
The film cited anonymous US officials who said the initial report had concluded the shooting was intentional, but the wording was later softened to avoid diplomatic fallout.
Gabavics was confirmed by Monday’s NYT investigation as the official who first raised concerns about the decision-making.
More than three years after the incident, Abu Akleh’s death remains a contentious point for both US officials and international observers.
Of all the cases he worked, Gabavics said “this was the one that probably bothered me the most,” because “we had everything there.”
Trump says he might sign final TikTok deal on Thursday
US President Donald Trump says he has obtained a ‘provisional approval’ from China’s President Xi Jinping for the TikTok sale
Updated 27 October 2025
Reuters
TOKYO: US President Donald Trump said he might sign a final deal on TikTok on Thursday and has obtained a “provisional approval” from China’s President Xi Jinping, whom he is expected to meet later this week in South Korea during his Asia tour.
“Canada has been ripping us off for a long time and they’re not going to do it anymore ... I don’t want to meet with the Canadian Prime Minister,” Trump also told reporters on Air Force One en route to Japan from Malaysia.
Frankly Speaking: Regional conflicts through the lens of Western media
CNN’s International Diplomatic Editor Nic Robertson says journalists shut out by Israel depend on local reporters risking their lives to tell the story
Since Israel makes allegations against journalists killed by its forces in Gaza, Robertson says it should provide reporters the ability to test those claims
Updated 26 October 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: As critics accuse Western media of complicity in Gaza’s “genocide” by echoing Israeli narratives and playing down its deadly attacks on local journalists, CNN’s Nic Robertson says international media shut out by Israel depend on local reporters who risk their lives to tell the story.
Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking,” Robertson, CNN’s international diplomatic editor and a veteran war correspondent, sought to explain Western media coverage of the war in Gaza.
“I think we’re doing a huge amount to report on the suffering of Palestinians,” he said.
“We have teams in Gaza who are reporting for us, who we liaise with daily, hourly, and who help us get that frontline reporting that we can’t do ourselves. And they’re hugely courageous and do a tremendous job of bringing the absolute despair and destruction that’s going on in Gaza.”
Since the war began in October 2023, Israeli authorities have prevented foreign journalists from entering Gaza, allowing only a handful of tightly controlled visits accompanied by its troops.
To illustrate the difficulties of covering the war remotely, Robertson recalled reporting on a young child who died from starvation — a case Israel disputed.
Nic Robertson, who has reported for CNN International from Sarajevo, Kabul and beyond since 1990, agreed with ‘Frankly Speaking’ host Katie Jensen that Gaza is the most dangerous and restrictive environment he has seen. (AN Photo)
“I was sitting in Israel reporting on the death through starvation of a young child,” he told “Frankly Speaking” host Katie Jensen. “Israel disputes that the child died of starvation, disputes the narrative that comes from Gaza — says that this is all sort of Hamas propaganda.”
The story, he added, was emotionally wrenching. “It was hugely difficult to see the images and to tell that story because it’s emotionally hard. And you can only begin to imagine what it’s like for those families inside of Gaza.”
Israel began bombarding Gaza after a Hamas-led Palestinian militant attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, in which about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed and 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.
Israel’s retaliatory military campaign has since killed more than 68,500 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities, and devastated the enclave.
Human rights groups and the UN accuse Israel of using starvation as a weapon of war by systematically restricting food and aid. International organizations say famine and widespread malnutrition are direct consequences of these policies.
Of the more than 400 reported starvation deaths, at least 151 children have died from acute malnutrition since the start of the war — most of them in 2025 — according to Palestinian health authorities.
Even after a fragile ceasefire took effect on Oct. 10, Gaza remains one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists.
In September, UN Special Rapporteur Irene Khan called the conflict “the deadliest ever for journalists.”
Robertson, who has reported from Sarajevo, Kabul and beyond, agreed that Gaza is the most dangerous and restrictive environment he has seen. Yet, he noted, as in most wars, it is local journalists who bear the greatest risk.
The blood-covered camera belonging to Palestinian photojournalist Mariam Dagga, who was killed in an Israeli strike on Nasser hospital in the southern Gaza Strip during the Israel-Hamas war. (AFP/File Photo)
Asked if Gaza was the most dangerous and restrictive environment that he had ever reported from, he said: “It is. And I think as with all the journalist casualties we see around the world, in whichever conflict, almost invariably, they are the local journalists.
“That’s what we’re seeing in Gaza again — it’s the local journalists who are paying the highest price to try to bring the state of the war that’s developing and enveloping them and their lives and their families to the rest of the world. And that’s something all of us, who would like to be in Gaza reporting, deeply respect. It’s the ultimate sacrifice. In this profession, too many people have to pay that price.”
By mid-September, 252 Palestinian journalists had been killed in Israel’s offensive, according to UN figures. A separate count by Shireen.ps, a site named after slain Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, put the toll at more than 270.
Under international humanitarian law, journalists enjoy civilian protection unless they take direct part in hostilities.
But Israel has been accused of deliberately targeting journalists in Gaza.
Investigations by press freedom groups, the UN, and major media outlets indicate Israeli forces have deliberately attacked reporters.
Between October 2023 and January 2025, Reporters Without Borders filed five complaints with the International Criminal Court, providing evidence that the Israeli military committed war crimes against journalists in Gaza.
Israel denies deliberately targeting reporters, saying deaths occurred during operations against Hamas or involved individuals allegedly linked to militant groups.
Asked whether Israel has shown disregard for journalists’ lives and should face accountability, Robertson said the allegations are difficult to verify.
“Israel has named some of the journalists or said that some of the journalists that it’s killed belong to Hamas,” he said. “The proof of that hasn’t been put in a public forum for complete scrutiny.
“And part of the scrutiny that a journalist like me would want to probe those kinds of allegations is to be there on the ground and talk to people on the ground,” he added. “So, Israel’s allegations are hard to prove or disprove.”
Asked by host Katie Jensen whether Israel has shown disregard for journalists’ lives and should face accountability, Robertson said the allegations are difficult to verify. (AN Photo)
In August, seven journalists were killed when Israel targeted their tent in Gaza City, drawing condemnation from the UN and global media organizations.
Israel claimed one of them, Al Jazeera’s Anas Al-Sharif, was “the head of a Hamas terrorist cell,” but the BBC reported the military offered little evidence. The Committee to Protect Journalists’ CEO Jodie Ginsberg told the British outlet there was “no justification” for Al-Sharif’s killing.
Robertson said friends of the slain journalists “would dispute what Israel has said,” adding that some journalists have been hit in follow-up strikes — a tactic not uncommon in war.
“Over the past month or so, where a group of journalists went to report on one strike and then Israel had a follow-on strike.”
On Aug. 25, a double Israeli strike on Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis killed 20 people, including five journalists from the Associated Press, Reuters, Al Jazeera and Middle East Eye.
“This is not uncommon in war, to have follow-on strikes, but the result of it was very clear that the journalists and recovery workers who’d gone there in the immediate aftermath of the first strike were again targeted,” Robertson said.
“It’s increasingly the case that journalists will be caught up in those strikes.”
Still, he emphasized, the inability to investigate Israel’s claims firsthand is deeply frustrating.
“I think when it comes to the allegations that Israel has made that journalists were members of proscribed organizations like Hamas, is a very frustrating one for journalists stuck on the outside who would like to do due diligence and follow up on those allegations and report the findings,” he said.
“If Israel makes those allegations, then perhaps it could provide the ability for reporters to test their claims — and that’s just not possible right now.”
There have been calls for independent, effective, and thorough investigations into the killings of journalists, citing mounting evidence of targeted attacks during the conflict. (AFP/File Photo)
When asked whether CNN journalists feel frustrated by the access restrictions, Robertson said such limits are not new — but Gaza is uniquely closed off.
“I think back to other wars we’ve covered that have been dangerous,” he said. “And I think back, perhaps to 1992 to 1995, in Bosnia, the journalists there were able to get into Sarajevo, a city under siege.
“The besieging forces wouldn’t allow journalists easy access to get in. They controlled the access, but they still allowed journalists to get through the front lines. It wasn’t an easy process.”
However, he said that while the situation was “fraught with danger,” it was “perhaps not the same dangers that exist in Gaza” where the situation is “absolutely beyond that in the realm that we can’t get there.”
In terms of access, he said: “We’re not permitted either from crossing from Egypt or crossing from Israel. And that’s a frustration because to be there, you feel that you can tell the story and bring the voices from the story.”
Still, Robertson said, those voices “are not extinguished,” thanks to local journalists who continue to report despite immense danger, but the restriction “limits the world’s understanding and scale of what is happening.”
On a personal note, Robertson spoke of how he copes with decades of war coverage — from Iraq and Afghanistan to Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and now Gaza.
“I’m incredibly lucky,” he said.
“I have a very, very supportive family. My wife is a journalist. Well, was a journalist. We met while at CNN during the buildup to the first Gulf War.
“Indeed, she came with me to Baghdad when the first Gulf War started. We’ve seen each other in difficult situations.
“Our daughters, who are now grown and one of them is a journalist as well, understand what it is I do,” he added, stressing that “being able to go home and just be dad and a husband is incredibly grounding.”
Still, he admitted that the work has left emotional scars. “When you watch suffering up close and you talk to people who’ve suffered, who’ve lost loved ones, I kind of feel that the burden of that is accumulative.
“Our family jokes that if we’re sitting at home watching a movie, I’m the first one to have tears rolling down my cheeks. And I don’t think I was like that 20 or 30 years ago,” he said.
Reflecting on journalism’s future amid many challenges, including from artificial intelligence, Robertson highlighted to Frankly Speaking the fact that serious reporting and serious audiences “go hand in hand.” (AN Photo)
Robertson said his earliest assignments remain the most vivid, including in Afghanistan during the Taliban’s early years in the mid-1990s.
“Just what the utter desperation of families whose villages had been destroyed, mud homes reduced,” he said. “The mud on the floor and a man with a shovel one October, then digging through, looking for the remains of his family’s possessions in what was left of his house and pulling out an old iron bedstead.”
“For me, it just told me about the appalling paucity and tragedy that accompany war the world over.”
Reflecting on journalism’s future amid many challenges, including from artificial intelligence, Robertson said serious reporting and serious audiences “go hand in hand.”
“There is an appetite for good, trustworthy journalism,” he added. “And I think if we can keep delivering that, there’ll be an audience that wants it.”
“And I suppose one of my takeaway experiences from the last 30 years or so — and it’s a shame that this is the experience in a way — but people value news more when it’s really important to them. And here I’m thinking of countries in conflict.”
He cited the example of the four-day war between India and Pakistan in May. “There was an immense appetite in the region there, both in India and Pakistan, and more broadly in the region, for journalism like ours at CNN that was seen as nonpartisan,” he said.
“So, absolutely, there is an appetite for what we offer, which is trustworthy, unbiased, unvarnished news reporting. And we stay true to that, and we’ll have to continue to stay true to that.”
Robertson added: “They’ll come to us when they realize they need us. And that may take a number of people in their tens of millions to stray into the rumor mills and the twisting that’s available on everywhere they turn on their social media feeds.
“But people will trust people who are trustworthy. That’s my core belief, and that’s never been shaken by this, and I don’t believe it will change.”