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Tag: uae

  • Yemeni experts support allegations of secret UAE prisons, despite Emirati denial

    After STC setbacks in the east, Saudi Arabia corrals southern factions into talks while allegations of secret prisons run by UAE forces in Yemen regain attention.

    For much of the Yemen war, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) appeared aligned under the umbrella of the Saudi-led coalition, united by the declared objective of rolling back Houthi control and restoring Yemen’s internationally recognized government. Yet developments over the past months have brought into sharper relief a growing divergence between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi-one that has reshaped dynamics on the ground in southern Yemen and reopened long-suppressed debates over sovereignty, accountability, and the future balance of power in the country.

    In addition to power shifts, accusations of human rights abuses involving UAE-backed forces have come back into focus, specifically regarding allegations of secret prisons in Yemen.

    The Southern Transitional Council (STC), a UAE-backed actor, has sought to consolidate control over southern governorates and advance a renewed secessionist project. Its recent military setbacks, the Emirati recalibration that followed, Saudi Arabia’s parallel push to convene Yemeni factions in Riyadh, and renewed scrutiny of human rights violations have together marked a turning point in the conflict’s southern theater. At the same time, the Houthis, while not aligned with Riyadh, remain a central factor shaping Saudi calculations following the Gaza war and the collapse of earlier understandings.

    Yemen today is governed not by a single center of power but by overlapping authorities, armed groups, and external sponsors. According to Abdulghani Al-Iryani, a senior researcher at the Sana’a Center for Strategic Studies, this fragmentation is the result of both internal rivalries and deliberate external strategies.
    “The Houthis took over the capital of Yemen, Sana’a, in 2014 and expelled the elected president,” Al-Iryani told The Media Line. “As a result, the government of Saudi Arabia enlisted the help of many countries in the region in a Saudi-led coalition to evict the Houthis from the capital and restore the legitimate government.”

    That objective was never achieved. “When it became clear that there’s no advance towards the objective, the members of the coalition withdrew and only the United Arab Emirates stayed with a sizable contribution of weapons and funds and fighters and soldiers,” Al-Iryani explained.

    Supporters of the UAE-backed separatist group, Southern Transitional Council, rally in Aden, Yemen January 10, 2026. (credit: REUTERS/Fawaz Salman TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

    The UAE’s continued involvement reshaped the south. “The UAE managed to expel the Houthis from the port city of Aden in the south and from most of the south,” he continued. “And the forces that it has funded and supported, several, actually, nearly a dozen armed groups, took over the south.”

    Among those groups, the STC emerged as the dominant political-military actor. “The temporary capital was controlled by an armed group called the Southern Transitional Council, which is backed by the UAE,” Al-Iryani said. “And it seeks secession from Yemen and restoration of the old People’s Democratic Republic of South Yemen,” he added.

    He stressed that the STC’s internal makeup is inherently volatile. “The Southern Transitional Council is a collection of socialist generals and activists from the Yemen Socialist Party,” he said, “and they are allied, they are joined by extreme Salafists,” he added.

    “The combination is very strange, but that is, I think, intended,” he noted. “They believe that their religious duty is to exterminate the Houthis because the Houthis are Shia.”

    In late 2025, STC forces moved eastward toward Hadramawt and Al-Mahrah-an advance widely seen as an attempt to complete control over the territory of pre-1990 South Yemen.

    Tawfik Al-Hamidi, a Yemeni lawyer, human rights activist, and politician working with the SAM Organization for Rights and Liberties, told The Media Line that since Dec. 2025, Yemen has witnessed a major shift following the movement of forces affiliated with the STC toward the eastern governorates of Hadramawt and Al-Mahrah.

    “This move appeared aimed at completing control over all territories that previously constituted South Yemen before 1990,” he said, adding that “the advance was reportedly backed by the United Arab Emirates, which has financed and supported STC forces-estimated at over 100,000 personnel-and supplied them with advanced weapons, including armored vehicles.”

    Saudi Arabia reacted forcefully. “Saudi Arabia viewed this step as a direct threat to its national security and strategic depth,” Al-Hamidi said, particularly in light of the Bab al-Mandab strait and statements by senior STC leaders signaling readiness to normalize relations with Israel in the event of southern secession.

    After the STC refused to withdraw, “Saudi Arabia turned to military intervention, following an official mandate from the internationally recognized Yemeni government to protect civilians in Hadramawt,” Al-Hamidi noted.

    Al-Iryani described the outcome starkly: “It was a big defeat. The soldiers that withdrew from the east left all the heavy weaponry behind. And they became disorganized. It was a very hectic withdrawal,” he said.

    Saudi Arabia then moved to contain the crisis politically. “The STC had no choice but to accept the ceasefire and was given instructions to come to Riyadh for south-south talks,” Al-Iryani continued.

    “The delegation of the STC arrived in Riyadh, minus the chairman of the STC, General al-Zoubaidi, who was whisked by the UAE to Abu Dhabi,” he noted. “As it stands now, he is calling for resistance, while his delegation has, under Saudi pressure, dissolved itself,” he added.

    Al-Iryani placed the STC episode within a broader Emirati regional strategy. “The UAE attached itself to the US and to Israel and attempts by all means to make itself useful to these two powers,” he said. “And since the US was worried about the Islamist uprising that started with the Arab Spring, the UAE made it its task to destroy Islamist parties throughout the region,” he added.

    “The UAE chose an extreme strategy of basically planning to exterminate the Muslim Brotherhood but supporting extremist groups in doing so as well,” he noted.

    Proxy war in Yemen

    In Yemen, this translated into proxy warfare. “That is why … instead of forming one strong militia in the south, they formed a dozen militias so that even if Saudi can control some, they cannot control them all,” Al-Iryani said.

    “Currently, there are Yemeni mercenaries for the Emirates,” he added. “They have these armed groups that they have formed and supported and trained, and they can use them to destabilize the country and obstruct any peace aspects in the long run.”

    While Riyadh does not support the Houthis, Al-Iryani emphasized that Saudi-Houthi relations had entered a pragmatic phase before October 7.

    “For the past three years, the Houthis were under the impression they had made a deal with Saudi Arabia,” he said. “They figured since we’re going to get all the land that we want on the negotiation table, why fight now as we used to?” he added.

    That understanding unraveled after the Gaza war. “That has changed from the Saudi side by the strong, aggressive stance of the Houthis in support of the people of Gaza,” he said.

    “The Saudis tolerated the losses that the Houthis’ activity in the Red Sea caused them,” Al-Iryani noted. “But when the fighting formally stopped in Gaza with the current ceasefire, it became clear to the Houthis that the Saudis have no interest in going back to the agreement that they had negotiated before October 7th,” he explained.

    He stressed that Saudi Arabia remains focused on limiting Houthi influence rather than accommodating it. “I believe that the Saudis are committed to ending the war,” Al-Iryani said. “It is in their best interest to stop the fighting because it affects them directly as a neighboring country,” he noted.

    As military and political dynamics shifted, long-standing allegations against UAE-backed forces resurfaced.

    “Regarding the secret prisons operated by the UAE in Yemen, this is not a new issue,” a Yemeni journalist based in Sana’a told The Media Line under conditions of anonymity. “It has been documented for years in reports issued by local and international human rights organizations,” he said.

    “These reports did not receive sufficient attention due to the political and military alignment between the UAE and Saudi Arabia,” he added, “which has had severe repercussions on Yemeni civilians who have paid a heavy price as a result of the expansion of Emirati influence in several southern provinces,” he continued.

    UAE officials have denied accusations that it is running secret prisons in Yemen. The Media Line reached out to multiple sources for more details, but they did not respond.

    Al-Hamidi detailed the record. “On May 25, 2017, SAM for Rights and Liberties announced the discovery of dozens of secret detention sites in Aden, Hadramawt, and Shabwa, operated by unlawful forces backed by the UAE,” he said.

    “Most alarming, however, are reports revealing coordination between UAE-backed forces and elements linked to al-Qaida,” Al-Hamidi added. “This raises serious concerns about the nature of this coordination and its role in fueling extremism rather than combating it.”

    Al-Hamidi added that subsequent documentation by the SAM Organization for Rights and Liberties expanded on these findings. According to reports published by the organization in the years that followed, including investigations into enforced disappearances and a comprehensive report titled “The Long Absence,” the network of secret detention facilities was accompanied by systematic patterns of disappearance, with dozens of detainees remaining unaccounted for.

    “Dozens of victims remain missing to this day,” Al-Hamidi said, warning that many cases have faded from public attention despite being fully documented by human rights organizations.

    From Sana’a, the Yemeni journalist warned of the broader consequences. “What the UAE has done goes far beyond the framework of the Arab Coalition, constituting grave human rights violations, a breach of Yemeni sovereignty, and a violation of international law,” he said.

    “Ultimately, the continued presence of the UAE in Yemen has contributed significantly to prolonging the conflict, strengthening Houthi influence, and creating an unstable environment in which the threat of terrorism is used as a political tool against opponents,” he added.

    Looking ahead, assessments of Saudi–Emirati relations diverge sharply.

    “In my view, it is unlikely that we will see a further confrontation between Saudi Arabia and the UAE in Yemen,” the Yemeni journalist said, “despite the clear differences in their objectives and approaches,” he added.

    “The relationship between the two countries is based on a broader strategic partnership that goes beyond the Yemeni file,” he noted, “which is why disagreements are usually managed behind the scenes rather than through open confrontation,” he added.

    Al-Iryani offered a far bleaker outlook. “I think that the break between Saudi Arabia and the UAE is going to be permanent,” he said, citing Abu Dhabi’s alignment with Israel, still seen as a hostile actor for Riyadh.

    “The current withdrawal of STC and formally with it of the Emirates doesn’t end the fighting on the ground, it helps Riyadh to gain back control gradually, but for sure this is far from over,” Al-Iryani said.

    As Yemen enters yet another phase of recalibration, the retreat of the STC, Saudi Arabia’s renewed political initiative in Riyadh, the reassessment of the Houthi file after Gaza, and the resurfacing of long-documented human rights violations together underscore how unresolved the conflict remains.

    What has changed is that the fault lines within the coalition itself, long present beneath the surface, are now shaping events as decisively as the war’s original divisions, leaving Yemen caught between competing regional agendas, fragile local actors, and an elusive path toward stability.

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  • Which countries, movements, groups are involved in Yemen’s yearslong conflict?

    Yemen’s more than decade-long civil war has flared up after a United Arab Emirates-backed separatist movement swept through territory in the south, splintering the Saudi-led coalition.

    Yemen’s more than decade-long civil war has flared up after a United Arab Emirates-backed separatist movement swept through territory in the south, splintering the Saudi-led coalition that was created to fight the Iran-aligned Houthi group.

    Below are details of the key factions in the conflict in Yemen, which has caused one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises:

    The Houthis

    The Yemeni conflict was triggered when the Houthi movement, formally named Ansar Allah, ousted the Saudi-backed, internationally recognized government of then-president Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi in late 2014.

    The group remains the dominant military force in the country, controlling the capital Sanaa and Yemen’s populous northern highlands. It is estimated to control territory where between 60% to 65% of Yemenis live.

    The Saudi-led coalition accuses Iran of arming, training and funding the Houthis. The group denies being an Iranian proxy and says it develops its own weapons.

    HOUTHI TERRORISTS carry weapons as they stand near the site of Israeli airstrikes in Sanaa, Yemen, in September. (credit: KHALED ABDULLAH/REUTERS)

    The Houthis have demonstrated their missile and drone capabilities during the Yemen war in attacks on Saudi Arabia and the UAE, targeting oil installations and vital infrastructure.

    Seen as part of a regional alliance known as the “Axis of Resistance” backed by Iran, the Houthis have also rallied behind the Palestinians in the Gaza war, lobbing drones and missiles at Israel and attacking commercial shipping in the Red Sea.

    The Houthis have proven resilient, defying over ten years of bombing by the Saudi-led coalition, as well as US and British strikes in recent years.

    Saudi Arabia

    Riyadh entered Yemen when it led the military coalition against the Houthis in March 2015, seeking to restore Hadi’s government. Saudi Arabia sought to prevent an Iran-aligned group from consolidating power on its southern border.

    Riyadh and Tehran, despite a China-brokered thawing of relations, have long been regional rivals and deeply distrust one another.

    STC

    The Southern Transitional Council, which was trained and equipped by the United Arab Emirates, seeks secession for the south, which was an independent state until unification with the north in 1990. The southern leadership at the time tried to secede in 1994 but was swiftly beaten by then-president Ali Abdallah Saleh’s army.

    The STC, led by Aidarous al-Zubaidi, is ostensibly part of the Saudi-led coalition but declared in 2020 it would establish self-rule in the south. Tensions peaked in December 2025 when the group seized large swathes of land in Hadramout and Al Mahra provinces and swept to the borders of Saudi Arabia, challenging the regional heavyweight’s influence.

    Islah party

    The Yemeni Congregation for Reform, better known as al-Islah, is a Sunni Islamist movement with historic ties to the Muslim Brotherhood. It is a key faction within the recognized government but is viewed by the UAE and the STC as a terrorist organization. Its major stronghold has long been Marib, the country’s sole gas-producing region with one of its largest oilfields.

    UAE

    The UAE joined the Saudi-led coalition and was among its most effective ground forces. A withdrawal of UAE troops was announced in 2019 and completed in 2020, but it maintained influence on the ground through the STC and other factions.

    Abu Dhabi is motivated by its antipathy towards the Muslim Brotherhood and securing shipping lanes in the strategic Bab al-Mandab Strait and Gulf of Aden, analysts have said.

    The Saudi-backed government

    The eight-member Presidential Leadership Council, led by Rashad al-Alimi, is the internationally recognized authority in Yemen but faces dwindling power. It was formed in Riyadh in April 2022 to replace former president Hadi and unify anti-Houthi forces, but the council has been paralyzed by the divisions it was meant to solve.

    Following the STC’s December offensive, the government’s effective control is likely now limited to small, isolated pockets, and is reliant on Saudi airpower.

    National Resistance Forces

    The National Resistance Forces are a well-equipped anti-Houthi force led by Tarek Saleh, a nephew of former Yemeni president Saleh and a member of the PLC. Originally established with UAE support to battle the Houthis on Yemen’s west coast, the force has maintained ties to Saudi Arabia and aims for a unified Yemen, positioning itself as a counterweight to both the Houthis and southern secessionists.

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  • Retail Investors Lead Israel’s Crypto Boom During Periods of National Uncertainty


    MENA crypto markets show diverse adoption narratives – retail-driven in Israel, institutional-led in Turkey and UAE, and resilient yet isolated in Iran.

    Israel’s cryptocurrency economy has experienced significant growth, particularly following the national crisis triggered by the October 7, 2023, attacks, according to a recent Chainalysis report.

    From 2024 to 2025, the country saw crypto inflows surpassing $713 billion in a steady expansion in line with prior trends. Before the attacks, transaction volumes in Israel closely matched expected activity, with deviations averaging just -0.3%. Following the attacks, however, volumes consistently exceeded forecasts and averaged $0.66 billion more per month than predicted.

    Israel’s Retail Crypto Activity Explodes

    Overall, actual activity surpassed anticipated levels by 60.4% on average, demonstrating a constant increase rather than a temporary surge in response to crisis conditions. This pattern has continued through 2024 and into 2025, in what Chainalysis has deemed to be a lasting behavioral shift among Israeli crypto users and positioning digital assets as a financial refuge during periods of national uncertainty.

    The blockchain data platform noted that similar trends have been observed in other countries facing crises, such as Ukraine and Iran, where crypto adoption spiked in response to geopolitical disruptions.

    Analysis by transfer size indicates that this growth is largely retail-driven. Small transfers of under $1,000 and mid-range transfers between $1,000 and $10,000 show the most significant spikes. Small retail transfers reached nearly six times their January 2022 baseline in early 2025, while mid-range retail activity grew roughly four to five times over the same period.

    Institutional and professional transaction segments also increased, but at a comparatively restrained rate. The retail-led nature of this growth is similar to patterns seen in other regions affected by conflict or economic stress, as individual citizens turned to cryptocurrencies as alternative financial tools.

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    Zooming Out: MENA Region

    Besides Israel, the MENA region’s major crypto markets present three distinct narratives of adoption. Turkey, for one, has seen crypto inflows soar to roughly $878 billion by mid-2025, as it outpaced all regional markets despite ongoing currency devaluation and inflation. While institutional adoption has remained strong, retail participation has contracted sharply as small and large retail transactions declined by 2.3% and 1.6%, respectively, and professional trader growth dropped nearly 90%.

    This divergence reflects affordability challenges, tighter regulations from 2024, and evolving market behavior. Simultaneously, speculative altcoin trading surged from $50 million to over $240 million by mid-2025, which could mean that remaining participants are seeking higher yields amid economic pressures.

    Meanwhile, the UAE’s crypto economy expanded by 33% between 2024 and 2025 as it received over $56 billion in inflows. Growth is primarily driven by large institutional transactions, which increased 54.7%, and institutional transfers, up 37.2%. Merchant services, however, saw substantial retail adoption, as seen with small retail transfers (<$1,000), which grew 88.1%, large retail transfers 83.6%, and professional transfers 79.5%.

    This indicates a divergence between general crypto usage and commercial applications, as the UAE appears to be quietly emerging as a regulated crypto hub where institutional adoption coexists with expanding everyday transactional use.

    Iran’s crypto ecosystem also continued expanding, despite sanctions, economic pressures, and growing isolation from global exchanges, with mid-2025 volumes up 11.8% from 2024. Local exchanges dominate the market: Nobitex.ir accounts for 54.2% of inflows. The sector endured challenges, including a $90 million Nobitex hack in early 2025, but overall growth remained stable.

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  • Barrage of Israeli airstrikes kills 32 in Gaza City, including 12 children, hospital says

    A barrage of airstrikes killed at least 32 people across Gaza City as Israel ramps up its offensive there and urges Palestinians to evacuate, medical staff reported Saturday.The dead included 12 children, according to the morgue in Shifa Hospital, where the bodies were brought.In recent days, Israel has intensified strikes across Gaza City, destroying multiple high-rise buildings and accusing Hamas of putting surveillance equipment in them.On Saturday, the army said it struck another high-rise used by Hamas in the area of Gaza City. It has ordered residents to leave as part of an offensive aimed at taking over the largest Palestinian city, which it says is Hamas’ last stronghold. Hundreds of thousands of people remain there, struggling under conditions of famine.One of the strikes overnight and into early morning Saturday hit a house in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, killing a family of 10, including a mother and her three children, said health officials. The Palestinian Football Association said a player for the Al-Helal Sporting Club, Mohammed Ramez Sultan, was killed in the strikes, along with 14 members of his family. Images showed the strikes hitting followed by plumes of smoke.Israel’s army did not immediately respond to questions about the strikes.Hostages’ relatives rally in IsraelMeanwhile, relatives of Israeli hostages held by Hamas rallied in Tel Aviv on Saturday to demand a deal to release their loved ones and criticized what they said was a counterproductive approach by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in securing a resolution.Einav Zangauker, the mother of hostage Matan Zangauker, described Israel’s attempted assassination of Hamas leaders in Qatar this week as a “spectacular failure.”“President Trump said yesterday that every time there is progress in the negotiations, Netanyahu bombs someone. But it wasn’t Hamas leaders he tried to bomb — it was our chance, as families, to bring our loved ones home,” Zangauker said.Some Palestinians are leaving Gaza City, but many are stuckIn the wake of escalating hostilities and calls to evacuate the city, the number of people leaving has spiked in recent weeks, according to aid workers. However, many families remain stuck due to the cost of finding transportation and housing, while others have been displaced too many times and do not want to move again, not trusting that anywhere in the enclave is safe.In a message on social media Saturday, Israel’s army told the remaining Palestinians in Gaza City to leave “immediately” and move south to what it’s calling a humanitarian zone. Army spokesman Avichay Adraee said that more than a quarter of a million people had left Gaza City — from an estimated 1 million who live in the area of north Gaza around the city.The United Nations, however, put the number of people who have left at around 100,000 between mid-August and mid-September. The U.N. and aid groups have warned that displacing hundreds of thousands of people will exacerbate the dire humanitarian crisis. Sites in southern Gaza where Israel is telling people to go are overcrowded, according to the U.N., and it can cost money to move, which many people do not have.An initiative headed by the U.N. to bring temporary shelters into Gaza said more than 86,000 tents and other supplies were still awaiting clearance to enter Gaza as of last week.Gaza’s Health Ministry said Saturday that seven people, including children, died from malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, raising the toll to 420, including 145 children, since the war began.The bombardment Friday night across Gaza City came days after Israel launched a strike targeting Hamas leaders in Qatar, intensifying its campaign against the militant group and endangering negotiations over ending the war in Gaza.Families of the hostages still held in Gaza are pleading with Israel to halt the offensive, worried it will kill their relatives. There are 48 hostages still inside Gaza, around 20 of them believed to be alive.The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, abducting 251 people and killing some 1,200, mostly civilians. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 64,803 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many were civilians or combatants. It says around half of those killed were women and children. Large parts of major cities have been completely destroyed, and around 90% of some 2 million Palestinians have been displaced.

    A barrage of airstrikes killed at least 32 people across Gaza City as Israel ramps up its offensive there and urges Palestinians to evacuate, medical staff reported Saturday.

    The dead included 12 children, according to the morgue in Shifa Hospital, where the bodies were brought.

    In recent days, Israel has intensified strikes across Gaza City, destroying multiple high-rise buildings and accusing Hamas of putting surveillance equipment in them.

    On Saturday, the army said it struck another high-rise used by Hamas in the area of Gaza City. It has ordered residents to leave as part of an offensive aimed at taking over the largest Palestinian city, which it says is Hamas’ last stronghold. Hundreds of thousands of people remain there, struggling under conditions of famine.

    One of the strikes overnight and into early morning Saturday hit a house in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, killing a family of 10, including a mother and her three children, said health officials. The Palestinian Football Association said a player for the Al-Helal Sporting Club, Mohammed Ramez Sultan, was killed in the strikes, along with 14 members of his family. Images showed the strikes hitting followed by plumes of smoke.

    Israel’s army did not immediately respond to questions about the strikes.

    Hostages’ relatives rally in Israel

    Meanwhile, relatives of Israeli hostages held by Hamas rallied in Tel Aviv on Saturday to demand a deal to release their loved ones and criticized what they said was a counterproductive approach by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in securing a resolution.

    Einav Zangauker, the mother of hostage Matan Zangauker, described Israel’s attempted assassination of Hamas leaders in Qatar this week as a “spectacular failure.”

    “President Trump said yesterday that every time there is progress in the negotiations, Netanyahu bombs someone. But it wasn’t Hamas leaders he tried to bomb — it was our chance, as families, to bring our loved ones home,” Zangauker said.

    Some Palestinians are leaving Gaza City, but many are stuck

    In the wake of escalating hostilities and calls to evacuate the city, the number of people leaving has spiked in recent weeks, according to aid workers. However, many families remain stuck due to the cost of finding transportation and housing, while others have been displaced too many times and do not want to move again, not trusting that anywhere in the enclave is safe.

    In a message on social media Saturday, Israel’s army told the remaining Palestinians in Gaza City to leave “immediately” and move south to what it’s calling a humanitarian zone. Army spokesman Avichay Adraee said that more than a quarter of a million people had left Gaza City — from an estimated 1 million who live in the area of north Gaza around the city.

    The United Nations, however, put the number of people who have left at around 100,000 between mid-August and mid-September. The U.N. and aid groups have warned that displacing hundreds of thousands of people will exacerbate the dire humanitarian crisis. Sites in southern Gaza where Israel is telling people to go are overcrowded, according to the U.N., and it can cost money to move, which many people do not have.

    An initiative headed by the U.N. to bring temporary shelters into Gaza said more than 86,000 tents and other supplies were still awaiting clearance to enter Gaza as of last week.

    Gaza’s Health Ministry said Saturday that seven people, including children, died from malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, raising the toll to 420, including 145 children, since the war began.

    The bombardment Friday night across Gaza City came days after Israel launched a strike targeting Hamas leaders in Qatar, intensifying its campaign against the militant group and endangering negotiations over ending the war in Gaza.

    Families of the hostages still held in Gaza are pleading with Israel to halt the offensive, worried it will kill their relatives. There are 48 hostages still inside Gaza, around 20 of them believed to be alive.

    The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, abducting 251 people and killing some 1,200, mostly civilians. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 64,803 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many were civilians or combatants. It says around half of those killed were women and children. Large parts of major cities have been completely destroyed, and around 90% of some 2 million Palestinians have been displaced.

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  • Contributor: Label the Muslim Brotherhood’s branches as terrorist organizations

    On Tuesday, New York City radio host Sid Rosenberg asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio about whether the State Department intends to designate the Muslim Brotherhood and Council on American-Islamic Relations as terrorist organizations. Rubio responded that “all of that is in the works,” although “obviously there are different branches of the Muslim Brotherhood, so you’d have to designate each one of them.”

    Logistics and bureaucracy aside: It’s about time.

    For far too long, the United States has treated the Muslim Brotherhood with a dangerous combination of naiveté and willful blindness. The Brotherhood is not a random innocuous political movement with a religious bent. It is, and has been since its founding about a century ago, the ideological wellspring of modern Sunni Islamism. The Brotherhood’s fingerprints are on jihadist groups as wide-ranging as Al Qaeda and Hamas, yet successive American administrations — Republican and Democratic alike — have failed to designate its various offshoots for what they are: terrorist organizations.

    That failure is not merely academic. It has real-world consequences. By refusing to label the Muslim Brotherhood accurately, we tie our own hands in the fight against Islamism — both at home and abroad. We allow subversive actors to exploit our political system and bankroll extremism under the guise of “cultural” or “charitable” outreach.

    Enough is enough.

    Founded in Egypt in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna, the Muslim Brotherhood’s stated mission has never wavered: the establishment of a global caliphate governed by sharia law. The Brotherhood has always attempted to position itself as a “political” organization, but it is “political” in the way Lenin was political. Think subversion through infiltration — or revolution through stealth.

    Consider Hamas. Hamas is not merely inspired by the Muslim Brotherhood — it is the Muslim Brotherhood’s Palestinian-Arab branch. The link is unambiguous; as Article Two of Hamas’ founding charter states, “The Islamic Resistance Movement is one of the wings of Moslem Brotherhood in Palestine.” And Hamas’ charter also makes clear its penchant for explicit violence: “Initiatives, and so-called peaceful solutions and international conferences, are in contradiction to the principles of the Islamic Resistance Movement.”

    This is not the rhetoric of nuance or moderation. This is the ideological foundation of contemporary jihadism. Yet, while Hamas is rightly designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the U.S. State Department, other branches of the Muslim Brotherhood remain off the list.

    Why? Because Western elites have allowed themselves to be duped by the Brotherhood’s two-faced strategy. Abroad, they openly sow the seeds of jihad, cheer for a global caliphate and preach for the destruction of Israel and Western civilization more broadly. But in the corridors of power in the U.S. and Europe, they and their Qatari paymasters don suits and ties, rebrand as “moderates” and leverage media credulity and overly generous legal protections to plant ideological roots.

    What’s more, CAIR — an unindicted co-conspirator in the largest terrorism financing trial in U.S. history — has extremely well-documented ties to the Brotherhood. And yet CAIR agents continue to operate freely in the United States, masquerading as civil rights advocates while pushing Islamist narratives that undermine the core constitutional principles of equality that they purport to champion. Today, almost two years after CAIR-linked Hamas executed the Oct. 7 pogrom in Israel, CAIR remains in good standing with many elected Democrats.

    It shouldn’t be so. In November 2014, the United Arab Emirates designated CAIR as a terrorist organization, citing its links to the Brotherhood and Hamas. And the Brotherhood itself is recognized as a terrorist organization by at least Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, Bahrain and Russia. Jordan also banned the Brotherhood earlier this year. Put bluntly: There is absolutely no reason the United States should have a warmer approach toward CAIR than the UAE or a warmer approach toward the Brotherhood than Saudi Arabia.

    The first Trump administration flirted with the idea of designating the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization. It was the right impulse. But the effort was ultimately bogged down by internal bureaucracy and international pressure — most notably from Qatar and Turkey, both sometime U.S. partners that harbor strong Brotherhood sympathies and bankroll Islamist causes. And the second Trump administration’s troubling embrace of Qatar may well nip any designation in the bud before it even takes off.

    Critics argue that such a designation would complicate relations with countries where Brotherhood affiliates participate in local politics. But since when did the U.S. place a premium on building alliances with the ideological cousins of Al Qaeda and ISIS?

    Moreover, designating the Muslim Brotherhood would empower domestic law enforcement and intelligence agencies to go after its networks and financial infrastructure. It would send a clear signal that the U.S. government no longer accepts a claim of “nonviolent Islamism” as a pass when designating terrorist groups.

    In a time when the threat from Islamic extremism remains global and decentralized, we can no longer afford to turn a blind eye to the architects of the movement. The Muslim Brotherhood is not, as “Arab Spring” boosters risibly claimed a decade and a half ago, a Western partner in “democracy.” It is the mother’s milk of modern Sunni jihadism.

    The question is not whether we can afford to designate Muslim Brotherhood offshoots as terrorist organizations. It is: How much longer can we afford not to?

    Josh Hammer’s latest book is “Israel and Civilization: The Fate of the Jewish Nation and the Destiny of the West.” This article was produced in collaboration with Creators Syndicate. @josh_hammer

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    Ideas expressed in the piece

    • The Muslim Brotherhood should be designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, ending what the author characterizes as a dangerous combination of naiveté and willful blindness toward the group. The organization has served as the ideological wellspring of modern Sunni Islamism since its founding in Egypt in 1928, with stated goals of establishing a global caliphate governed by sharia law.

    • Hamas represents a direct branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, as explicitly stated in Article Two of Hamas’ founding charter, which declares “The Islamic Resistance Movement is one of the wings of Moslem Brotherhood in Palestine.” This connection demonstrates the Brotherhood’s clear ties to recognized terrorist organizations, yet other Brotherhood branches remain undesignated.

    • The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) maintains well-documented ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and was an unindicted co-conspirator in the largest terrorism financing trial in U.S. history. Despite these connections, CAIR continues operating freely in the United States while pushing Islamist narratives under the guise of civil rights advocacy.

    • Multiple American allies have already taken decisive action, with the United Arab Emirates designating CAIR as a terrorist organization in 2014, and countries including Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Bahrain, and Russia recognizing the Brotherhood itself as a terrorist organization. Jordan banned the Brotherhood earlier this year, making American inaction increasingly inconsistent with international consensus.

    • Designation would empower domestic law enforcement and intelligence agencies to target Brotherhood networks and financial infrastructure while sending a clear signal that claims of “nonviolent Islamism” no longer provide protection from terrorist designations. The failure to act has real-world consequences, allowing subversive actors to exploit the American political system and bankroll extremism through supposed cultural or charitable outreach.

    Different views on the topic

    • The search results do not contain substantial opposing perspectives to the author’s position on designating the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization. Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed that designation efforts are “in the works” but acknowledged significant legal and bureaucratic challenges that complicate the process[1].

    • Procedural complexities present obstacles to designation, as each regional branch of the Muslim Brotherhood must be formally designated separately due to the organization’s decentralized structure. Rubio noted that “we have to be very careful, because these things will be challenged in court” and emphasized the need to “show your work like a math problem” to withstand legal scrutiny[1].

    • Federal judicial oversight poses potential barriers to implementation, with Rubio expressing concern that “all you need is one federal judge—and there are plenty—that are willing to basically try to run the country from the bench” through nationwide injunctions that could block designation efforts[1].

    Josh Hammer

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  • Formula 1 wants Monaco to shell out more to host opulent Grand Prix

    Formula 1 wants Monaco to shell out more to host opulent Grand Prix

    Liberty Media Corp., owner of the Formula 1 racing business, is seeking additional funds from the principality of Monaco as part of advanced talks for a new contract to extend the historic car race beyond 2025.

    Monaco pays about $20 million a year to host the event, the lowest total on the 24-race calendar, and representatives of Liberty Media are seeking an increase, according to people familiar with the discussions. The parties agreed to the current three-year deal in September 2022. This year, the action begins on May 24.

    Like all major tourist attractions, the Monaco Grand Prix delivers a big economic boost to the region, filling hotel rooms with spenders big and small. Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, two other race hosts, fork over more than $50 million a year, according to some estimates. The fees provide Formula 1 with funds it uses to pay out prize money at the end of each season. 

    A spokesperson for Formula 1 declined to comment on the current talks, but said the company is not considering pulling out of Monaco. The Automobile Club de Monaco, which organizes the race, didn’t respond to a request for comment. 

    Under Chief Executive Officer Greg Maffei, Liberty Media has grown annual Formula 1 revenue by more than 50% since 2019 to $3.22 billion last year. The company has been focused on expanding Formula 1 to countries beyond Europe, where the sport originated. The US now hosts three races — in Miami, Austin, and Las Vegas — and there have been persistent rumors of a race coming to another US city.

    In 2022, New York City Mayor Eric Adams offered Randall’s Island as a potential venue, but Formula 1 CEO Stefano Domenicali disagreed about the viability of that location, a small island of ballfields that would be difficult to access for the 300,000-plus fans anticipated at such an event.

    The Prime Minister of Thailand recently met with F1 officials to discuss a race in Bangkok.

    The glamorous Monaco Grand Prix, held in the sunshine-drenched streets of Monte Carlo, is considered a bucket-list event in motorsports. Monaco organizers have been unwilling to change their business model all that much because they are confident that the history and prestige of their nearly 100-year-old circuit trumps financial considerations, one person said. Many of the drivers live in Monaco.

    But Formula 1 fans and prominent racers including Max Verstappen, Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton have criticized the two-mile track as oppressively dull, since the size of the modern race cars prohibits them from the daring passes and three-abreast racing that more modern circuits allow. 

    “Thank God that’s over, that was the most boring race I’ve ever participated in,” seven-time world champion Hamilton said after he finished third there in 2022.

    The principality has been forced to change in the past. Two years ago, it gave up the right to produce its own television coverage of the race in exchange for a new contract.

    “Monaco epitomizes what F1 is,” said Vincenzo Landino, an F1 analyst and consultant who publishes the Qualifier, a newsletter about the sport. “You get rid of that, now you have a brand crisis, in my opinion.”

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    Thomas Buckley, Hannah Elliott, Bloomberg

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  • UAE’s Central Bank Initiates Historic Cross-Border Digital Dirham Transfer to China

    UAE’s Central Bank Initiates Historic Cross-Border Digital Dirham Transfer to China

    On January 29, Sheikh Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Chairman of the Board of the Central Bank of the UAE, marked a momentous occasion by conducting the first-ever cross-border payment using the UAE Central Bank’s digital currency, the ‘Digital Dirham.’

    The transaction, amounting to Dh50 million, was executed through the innovative ‘mBridge‘ platform, connecting the UAE directly with China.

    UAE’s Historic Cross-Border Transfer

    The historic cross-border transfer to China took place while Sheikh Mansour attended the celebration of the ‘Golden Jubilee’ of the establishment of the Central Bank and the graduation of 1,056 Emiratis from the inaugural batch of the ‘Ethraa Emiratisation’ program, held at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre.

    During the transaction, Sheikh Mansour emphasized the strategic commitment of the UAE’s leadership to solidify the nation’s position as a global financial hub.

    He spoke of the pivotal role of the Central Bank in fostering financial and monetary stability, optimizing efficiency and flexibility in the financial system, and propelling economic growth to advance the country’s development efforts.

    In his address, Sheikh Mansour reiterated the leadership’s dedication to empowering Emirati citizens and fostering their qualifications across diverse fields of work and knowledge.

    This commitment, he explained, aims to provide the financial sector with highly qualified national talents, aligning with the highest international standards and contributing to the overall cultural and developmental renaissance witnessed by the country.

    Congratulating the staff of the Central Bank and the Emirates Institute of Finance, as well as the accomplished graduates of the Ethraa program, Sheikh Mansour wished them success in serving their country and contributing to its continued progress.

    ‘Innovative Projects’ Pavilion

    The event also involved the ‘Innovative Projects’ Pavilion, where the Central Bank’s subsidiaries showcased their initiatives.

    Here, the Sheikh witnessed the launch of Al Etihad Payments company and the first successful financial transaction using the local payment card system, which includes distinctive specifications.

    Sheikh Mansour also received briefings on the services offered by the Aani instant payment platform, launched by Al Etihad Payments in October 2023, and the supervisory technology project ‘Suptech.’ These initiatives reflect the UAE’s commitment to staying at the forefront of financial technology and innovation.

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    Wayne Jones

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  • How Is Dubai Creating Artificial Rain?

    How Is Dubai Creating Artificial Rain?

    Dubai is cloud seeding its skies to create artificial rain, but how?How Is Dubai Creating Artificial…

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  • Jeff Zucker’s Abu Dhabi-backed fund just agreed a loan deal that would let it take over venerable London newspaper the Telegraph and Spectator magazine

    Jeff Zucker’s Abu Dhabi-backed fund just agreed a loan deal that would let it take over venerable London newspaper the Telegraph and Spectator magazine

    RedBird IMI has agreed a loan package with the Barclay family that would let it take control of the Telegraph newspaper and Spectator magazine, a prospect that’s sparked concern among Conservative lawmakers because of the fund’s ties to Abu Dhabi.

    The media investment vehicle, which is a joint venture between RedBird Capital Partners and the United Arab Emirates-based International Media Investments, said in a statement Monday that it had agreed to lend the Barclay family £600 million ($750 million), secured against the politically influential titles. 

    “Under the terms of this agreement, RedBird IMI has an option to convert the loan secured against the Telegraph and Spectator into equity, and intends to exercise this option at an early opportunity,” the investment vehicle said in a statement.

    Lloyds Banking Group Plc seized the Telegraph titles along with the Spectator magazine from the Barclay family in June to claw back debts, removing Barclay family members from their director positions and placing the businesses in receivership. The RedBird IMI loan will help the Barclay family to pay off the debt owed to Lloyds.

    Separately, IMI will lend a further £600 million secured against other Barclay family businesses and commercial interests. IMI is a private investment vehicle for Sheikh Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, according to a spokesman for RedBird IMI, whose statement emphasized IMI’s involvement would be passive.

    “Following transfer of ownership, RedBird Capital alone will take over management and operational responsibility for the titles under the leadership of RedBird IMI Chief Executive Jeff Zucker,” the statement said, referring to the former president of CNN. “International Media Investments will be a passive investor only.”

    Still, RedBird IMI’s statement will likely heighten concern among Conservative lawmakers, who are pushing the UK government to scrutinize the UAE’s involvement. Lawmakers have described any possible influence of the UAE royal family over the Telegraph as “a risk to our national security,” citing its record on press freedom and position on Israel.

    The prospect of foreign influence on the title has already raised concerns among senior ministers including Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat, Bloomberg News reported Saturday.

    “Any transfer of ownership will of course be subject to regulatory review,” RedBird IMI said in its statement, which pledged to maintain the existing editorial team of the publications. “We will continue to cooperate fully with the government and the regulator.”

    Even before that, UK Culture Secretary Luzy Frazer could issue a so-called Public Interest Intervention Notice. That would launch a study of the deal by British regulators. She could also freeze the transaction while that happens, if she chooses. The antitrust watchdog – the CMA – and media regulator Ofcom will report findings on antitrust and media issues respectively, to inform Frazer’s final decision, which could see her clear the deal, block it, or impose conditions.

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    Thomas Seal, Bloomberg

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  • How untraceable Russian gold is funding Putin’s war machine

    How untraceable Russian gold is funding Putin’s war machine

    The trail of gold is generating a vital source of revenue for the Russian president – Sputnik/Sergei Savostyanov/Pool via REUTERS

    Executives from across the gold industry will next week gather at the five-star SO/ hotel in Dubai for the city’s annual Precious Metals Conference.

    Speakers include the general counsel of the London Bullion Market Association who will give a talk on “Enhancing governance in challenging times”.

    Hanging over the conference is the spectre of Russian gold.

    Last week, the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) issued a red alert warning that Russia was increasingly using gold to avoid sanctions.

    The NCA warned of deliberate attempts “to launder sanctioned gold to mask its origin so that it can be hidden in supply chains and sold in the UK and around the world”.

    The UK government has also just become the first Western nation to announce a series of sanctions targeting specific companies involved in Russia’s gold trade.

    These include UAE-based gold trader Paloma Precious. Paloma is alleged to have traded $300m (£246m) in Russian gold since Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine.

    UAE is now under intense scrutiny for its role in the global market for shadowy Russian gold.

    russian goldrussian gold

    Russian gold is melted down to scrub it of its origin before being sold on – Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg

    The metal is being shipped from Russia to refineries in countries such as the UAE that do not have sanctions against Russia. There, the gold is melted down to scrub it of its association with Russia before being sold on.

    “Once melted down and recast or refined, the origin cannot be determined by examination, as any hallmarks are lost,” the NCA warned.

    The trail of gold is generating a vital source of revenue for President Putin’s war machine. And it is becoming glaringly clear that the bulk of this is moving through the UAE.

    London is the centre of the world’s gold trade and London Bullion Market Association (LBMA), which regulates the trade, banned Russian gold shortly after the invasion of Ukraine.

    The LBMA, which accredits gold refineries and sets the standard for global trade, banned bars made in Russia from March 7 2022 onwards from being traded. Western allies followed suit and banned all Russian gold exported from July 2022 onwards.

    Yet rather than crush the trade, it has been rerouted. UN data shows that UAE imports of Russian gold increased 15 times over between 2021 and 2022.

    Other data suggests the true figure may be even higher. Russian customs records obtained earlier this year by Reuters showed that the UAE had imported 75.7 tonnes of gold from Russia worth a total of $4.3bn in the year since the war in Ukraine began. This was 58 times the volume by weight that was imported across 2021.

    The UAE was by far the largest destination for Russian gold, followed by China (primarily via Hong Kong) and Turkey, which each imported around 20 tonnes.

    This data suggests sanctions on Paloma Precious are hitting only the tip of a very large iceberg.

    Based on the customs records, the $300m in Russian gold traded by Paloma is equivalent to only about 7pc of the total that entered the UAE in the first 12 months of the war.

    The majority of the world’s gold refineries are accredited by the LBMA, which means they have to prove the source of every gram of gold handled and are subjected to annual external audits. LBMA-accredited refineries account for around 90pc of annual mined gold production around the world.

    But in the recycled gold sector there is less oversight. LBMA-accredited refineries cover about 50-60pc of recycled gold production.

    It is the recycled gold that makes up the bulk of the UAE’s market. In the UAE, there are three or four major gold refineries. None are accredited by the LBMA.

    Until July this summer, the Emirates Gold refinery was an affiliate member of the LBMA. But after the LBMA completed a due diligence review this summer, it suspended the refinery’s membership “until further notice”. The suspension is understood to be driven by suspected links to Russia.

    Separately, the UAE also blocked Emirates Gold from delivering into Dubai’s gold market after it failed to meet standards for responsible sourcing and anti-money laundering.

    The beneficial owner of Emirates Gold is Paloma Precious. In September, London-listed Rockfire Resources announced a deal to acquire 100pc of Emirates Gold, provided it was reinstated to the UAE’s good delivery list. Rockfire has since said it is taking urgent legal advice to determine the impact of UK sanctions on the transaction.

    Paloma Precious did not respond to a request for comment.

    Because the UAE has no sanctions on Russia, Putin is free to export Russian gold to these refineries. Russia’s reliance on friendly countries such as the UAE to wash its gold mimics the way Putin has managed to circumvent the G7 oil price cap by building a “dark fleet” of tankers operating outside the Western insurance market.

    oil tankeroil tanker

    Putin has managed to circumvent the G7 oil price cap by building a ‘dark fleet’ of tankers – AP

    The bulk of the Russian gold that passes through the UAE is likely going on to China and India, but some will also be coming to the UK. It cannot be imported into the UK as bars because it lacks LBMA certification, but it can be imported as jewellery or even in electronics. British holidaymakers who buy jewellery in the UAE may also inadvertently be purchasing Russian gold and bringing it home.

    The end result is a lifeline for the Kremlin. Russia produces more than 300 tons of gold per year and the sector was worth £12.6bn to the economy in 2021. It is a “critical revenue stream” for Russia’s war effort and one of the largest after oil and gas, the Foreign Office warned.

    “Gold is essential to Russia,” says Christopher Swift, a national security lawyer at Foley & Lardner and formerly an official in the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.

    “Russia has evolved into a barter-style economy where they are using products from their extractive industries such as oil, gas and metals mining, to pay for the purchase of weapons overseas as well as for consumer goods.”

    While the West was quick to realise the significance of oil and gas to Putin’s war machine, it was slower to realise the significance of gold.

    However, as the Foreign Office sanctions last week demonstrate, Westminster is now waking up – and turning the screws on Putin.

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  • ACSYS Hosts Aden Conference in Washington, DC: 8th Anniversary of the Liberation of Aden South Yemen

    ACSYS Hosts Aden Conference in Washington, DC: 8th Anniversary of the Liberation of Aden South Yemen

    The American Center for South Yemen Studies (ACSYS) is honored to announce a landmark conference set to take place on July 20, 2023, in Washington, D.C. This significant event commemorates the eighth anniversary of the liberation of Aden, South Yemen, a pivotal moment in the history of the region. 

    This year’s conference aims to illuminate the progress made since the liberation, offer an in-depth discussion about the current conflict in Yemen, and critically examine the role and impact of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).

    For the past eight years, the city of Aden has been a symbol of resilience for the people of Yemen. The conference aims to honor this milestone while also examining the road ahead. Distinguished scholars and policy experts from around the world will participate in panel discussions and keynote speeches designed to foster constructive dialogue about the complex issues at hand.

    “The liberation of Aden was a turning point for South Yemen. However, we are still facing numerous challenges that need to be discussed on a global scale,” said Mohamed Saleh, Director of ACSYS. “We believe that through open discourse and knowledge sharing, we can contribute to shaping a peaceful and prosperous future for South Yemen.”

    Key topics to be addressed during the conference include progress and setbacks in the political, economic, and social rebuilding of South Yemen; the ongoing conflict and its regional implications; the role of AQAP and strategies to counter extremism in the region.

    The conference is open to the public. Registration is necessary and can be completed on the ACSYS website. Journalists are invited to cover the event and should contact the ACSYS press office for credentials.

    About ACSYS:

    The American Center for South Yemen Studies is an independent nonprofit institution dedicated to promoting understanding of the South Yemen region, its history, and its present challenges. Through research, dialogue, and education, ACSYS fosters awareness and knowledge about South Yemen within the international community.

    For more information, please visit our website or contact our press office at info@americancentersy.org.

    Note to editors: All speakers are available for interviews. High-resolution images from the liberation of Aden and the subsequent rebuilding efforts, as well as logos and headshots of key speakers, are available upon request. 

    Event Information:

    Date: July 20, 2023
    Time: 9 a.m.- 3:30 p.m.
    Location: Hyatt Place, 33 New York Avenue NE, Washington, DC 20002

    RSVP here 

    Website: www.americancentersy.org

    Source: American Center for South Yemen Studies (ACSYS)

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  • Top Skateboarders Converge on Sharjah UAE for World Championships

    Top Skateboarders Converge on Sharjah UAE for World Championships

    California Skateparks-designed Aljada Skatepark hosts world’s best on their road to Paris.

    Press Release


    Feb 3, 2023 05:15 PST

    The world’s best skateboarders are performing their newest tricks this week at the massive Aljada Skatepark in Sharjah, UAE. Designed and built by California Skateparks, Aljada is hosting the World Skate 2022 World Championships for both Street and Park disciplines. After the new Champions are named next week, Aljada will remain as a permanent skatepark serving local youth.

    “The facility is unique and has beginner, intermediate, and elite competition-level Street and Park courses and covers almost 90,000 square feet (8,360 square meters),” said California Skateparks VP Bill Minadeo. “This is an amazing opportunity for local youth to interact with the world’s best skaters and host incredible events, like the World Championships.”

    The World Skate 2022 World Championships is a key qualifying event for the Paris 2024 Olympics. While the Street skaters have already competed in one qualifier in Rome last Summer, Sharjah will be the first chance for the Park skaters to earn important points to qualify for Paris.

    This weekend the Street skaters have their chance to earn the World title, with the Finals in the Men’s and Women’s competition taking place. The Street course at Aljada features a mirrored core section, with identical elements such as stairs and rails providing equal opportunity for both goofy- and regular-stance skaters to perform. The outer perimeter of the course includes more free-form features, allowing skaters to explore opportunities for unique tricks and combinations.

    Next week, the Park competitors have their turn and attention will shift to the massive bowl, which differs from recent competition bowl designs. The traditional single deep end is replaced by two nearly 10-foot (3-meter) deep ends on opposite sides of the bowl. To take full advantage of that, a long, sloping channel flows into the bowl from the deck, allowing skaters to begin their routines with maximum speed. The volcano flyover feature included in the Olympic Park course has been replaced by a hip/transfer section extending into the bowl from the side, instead of being the bowl’s centerpiece.

    Both the street course and competition bowl are the result of the California Skateparks design team’s nearly two-decades experience creating elite competition courses. In consultation with many athletes competing in Sharjah, the designers modified traditional contest elements and complemented them with new features that match the skaters’ growing level of competitiveness and evolving style of tricks. From early practice footage seen from Sharjah, evidence suggests that the California Skateparks design team got it right, including social-media posts showing how much fun visiting pros are having at Aljada. Which is great news for Sharjah’s local skaters.

    For more information about the World Skate 2022 World Championships, visit www.worldskate.org/skateboarding.

    To learn more about California Skateparks, visit www.californiaskateparks.com or contact Bill Minadeo: bill@caskateparks.com

    Source: California Skateparks

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  • Visited App Releases List of Top Travel Destinations in 2022

    Visited App Releases List of Top Travel Destinations in 2022

    Travel App, Visited has published top trends for travel in 2022. The travel report also highlights how many countries travelers around the world visit, top states that travelers visit and wish to visit and other travel stats from global travelers.

    Press Release


    Jan 10, 2023

    The travel app, Visited by Arriving In High Heels Corporation has published a travel report which showcases top travel trends around the world with highlight of 2022 travels. 

    Visited, available on iOS or Android, is an app that allows users to mark off places they’ve been around the world, browse new travel destinations, get a custom map of their travels, and set travel goals. 

    According to Visited’s travel stats, the average global traveler has been to 18 countries. Travelers from the United Arab Emirates have visited the most countries, with an average of 29 countries visited. Swiss and Swedish travelers came in second and third as the most well-traveled. American travelers have on average visited 16 countries.  The most popular countries to visit are France, Spain, Italy, Germany, the UK, and the U.S. 

    The most sought-after places to visit are Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Brazil. The top destinations that American travelers want to travel to include Australia, Greece, and New Zealand. The highest numbers of American users have traveled to Mexico, Canada, France, the UK, and Italy.

    The most popular travel destinations in the world in 2022 were in Europe for the top 9 spots and the U.S. came in tenth. UK, Mexico and Italy topped the list for Americans in 2022. The travel report also highlights to United States travel which states had the most travelers visit and which states make it to the want list. 

    The most popular travel lists are capitals of the world, world wonders and art museums. 

    Travel data was compiled based on 1,550,000 international users and 275,000 U.S. users. To see more top travel lists and browse top destinations worldwide, download Visited on iOS or Android. For the full travel report, visit https://visitedapp.com/2021-travel-report.

    To learn more about the Visited app, visit https://visitedapp.com

    About Arriving In High Heels Corporation

    Arriving In High Heels Corporation is a mobile app company with apps including Pay Off Debt, X-Walk, and Visited, their most popular app. 

    Contact Information

    Anna Kayfitz

    anna@arrivinginhighheels.com

    Source: Arriving In High Heels Corporation

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  • Dubai Announces Initiative to Become First Certified Autism Destination™ in Middle East North Africa Region

    Dubai Announces Initiative to Become First Certified Autism Destination™ in Middle East North Africa Region

    Specialized training will be provided to attractions and resorts as a first step to welcome autistic and sensory-sensitive visitors from all over the globe and start the journey towards certification that will have a lasting impact.

    Press Release


    Dec 15, 2022

    Dubai is taking steps to enhance the destination’s accessibility and inclusion for travelers from all over the world to the next level. The Dubai Economy and Tourism department is spearheading this movement with the International Board of Credentialing and Continuing Education Standards (IBCCES) to designate the first-ever Certified Autism Destination™ (CAD) outside the United States. The first phase of this initiative means all Dubai attractions, hospitality and entertainment organizations will have access to specialized autism-specific training designed to enhance staff knowledge, understanding and strategies for communication, guest experience and safety to better serve and accommodate people of determination. 

    With 1 in 6 people having sensory needs and rising global autism diagnosis rates, there is an overwhelming need for more accessibility options in the travel and entertainment industry. Many autistic and sensory-sensitive individuals and their families find it challenging when visiting new places or planning family trips due to lack of staff understanding or supports.

    In alignment with HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, National Policy for Empowering People of Determination, Dubai’s Certified Autism Destination™ initiative helps support this plan by focusing on areas of inclusion and city stakeholder empowerment. Through the training and eventual certification with IBCCES, Dubai’s leading entertainment, hospitality and travel facilities will become essential entities to furthering the initiative and create an accessible destination for people of determination.

    “We want to ensure that all visitors have the best possible experience when visiting Dubai. We are proud to partner with IBCCES to provide staff training to equip Dubai’s hospitality and entertainment teams with the tools and training needed to better serve people of determination, including those who are autistic or sensory-sensitive,” said Issam Kazim, CEO of Dubai Corporation for Tourism and Commerce. “IBCCES is recognized all over the globe as the international standard for autism training and certification and millions of families look to them for guidance on travel questions and approved destinations. We want these families to know Dubai stands ready to welcome them with open arms. We aim to encourage all travel and entertainment facilities in Dubai to take the next step and complete the IBCCES autism certification program to help Dubai become the next Certified Autism Destination™.”

    This IBCCES and Dubai Economy and Tourism partnership will open a new destination for these families to visit where they can feel welcomed and understood. IBCCES training and certification programs specifically for travel and entertainment organizations such as theme parks, attractions and hotels, help staff feel knowledgeable and empowered to serve these visitors better and create a more standardized, credible and long-term approach to efforts toward accessibility and providing accommodations for the guests. Research released earlier this year by Expedia Group Media Solutions shows 7 out of 10 consumers would choose a destination, lodging, or transportation option that is more inclusive to all types of travelers, even if it’s more expensive and 92% of consumers think it’s important for travel providers to meet the accessibility needs of all travelers; therefore, the demand for more accessible travel options is a universal want among all travelers.

    The next step to achieve the Certified Autism Destination™ designation will require a variety of travel and entertainment locations to undergo IBCCES’ Certified Autism Center™ (CAC) certification process. Beyond staff training, the CAC process will also include onsite reviews to provide additional recommendations and supports so that attractions and resorts can enhance the visitor experience.

    “It is a great honor to partner with Dubai Economy and Tourism department to elevate the level of commitment to a city-wide mission and become leaders in the tourism industry,” said Myron Pincomb, IBCCES Board Chairman. “So many families need more communication and understanding from travel destinations, so they can make those memories together that we all cherish. In some cases, small changes can make a huge impact. Our training and certification programs ensure each entertainment, hospitality, and service industry facility within Dubai is committed to long-term growth and understanding, not just a one-time training.” 

    For more than 20 years, IBCCES has been the leader in cognitive disorder training and certification for healthcare, education, and corporate professionals around the globe. IBCCES created programs specifically for hospitality and entertainment organizations such as hotels, theme parks, and other attractions so staff would be more knowledgeable and other accommodations offered to this growing, but underserved, part of the community. IBCCES is the only credentialing board offering these types of programs, including onsite reviews, sensory guide creation, and ongoing support to ensure locations continue to successfully provide accommodations and positive experiences. IBCCES also ensures autistic self-advocates and clinical and subject matter experts are featured in training content. 

    IBCCES also created AutismTravel.com, a free online resource for parents that lists certified destinations and connects families to other resources and each other. Each destination listed on the site has met the Certified Autism Center™ (CAC) requirements. 

    Source: IBCCES

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  • COP27 wins and losses: U.S. on the hook to pay for its pollution; natural gas gets nod as transition fuel

    COP27 wins and losses: U.S. on the hook to pay for its pollution; natural gas gets nod as transition fuel

    For the first time ever, rich nations, including a top-polluting U.S., will pay for the climate-change damage inflicted upon poorer nations.

    These smaller economies are often the source of the fossil fuels
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    ,
    minerals
    PICK,
    -0.20%

    and other raw materials behind the developed world’s modern conveniences and technologicial advancement, including many practices responsible for the Earth-warming emisisons. And yet the developing world shoulders the worst of the droughts, deadly heat, ruined crops and eroding coastlines that take lives and eat into economic growth.

    The deal, called “loss and damage” in summit shorthand, was struck as the U.N.’s Conference of Parties, or COP27, gaveled to a close near dawn Sunday in Egypt. Official talks ended Friday, but negotiations extended into the weekend.

    Read: Historic compensation fund approved at U.N. climate talks

    It was a big win for poorer nations which have long sought money — sometimes viewed as reparations — because they are often the victims of climate-worsened floods, famines and storms despite contributing little directly to the pollution that heats up the globe. It took last-minute, pre-summit negotiations to even get the topic on the official agenda.

    “Three long decades and we have finally delivered climate justice,” said Seve Paeniu, the finance minister of island nation Tuvalu, according to the Associated Press. “We have finally responded to the call of hundreds of millions of people across the world to help them address loss and damage.”

    ‘Three long decades and we have finally delivered climate justice.’


    — Seve Paeniu, finance minister for Tuvalu

    Pakistan’s environment minister, Sherry Rehman, said the establishment of the fund “is not about dispensing charity.” Pakistan, hit by devastating drought and more, dominated climate-change headlines this year.

    “It is clearly a down payment on the longer investment in our joint futures,” she said, speaking for a coalition of the world’s poorest nations.

    According to many conference participants, the U.S. was a late-stage roadblock to establishing this official payout language, though it signed off in the end. U.S. participation was also impacted once chief climate negotiator John Kerry tested positive for COVID-19, although he continued to work from his hotel.

    How does COP27 ‘loss and damage’ work? And where’s China?

    According to the agreement, the fund would initially draw on contributions from developed countries and other private and public sources such as international financial institutions, including the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

    While major emerging economies such as China wouldn’t automatically have to contribute, that option remains on the table. This is a key demand by the European Union and the U.S., who argue that China and other large polluters currently classified as “developing” countries have the financial clout and responsibility to pay their way.

    The fund would be largely aimed at the most vulnerable nations, though there would be room for middle-income countries that are severely battered by climate disasters to get aid.

    Getting serious about methane

    Attention on methane, a more-potent but shorter-lasting greenhouse gas than carbon, was considered a major win at the summit. Some 150 countries have now signed on to the voluntary Global Methane Pledge, an official effort to cap the release of the GHG whose reduction presents perhaps the easiest way to reduce the global warming.

    Read more: Natural gas-focused methane pact expands at climate summit, minus China

    With the pledge, countries representing 45% of global methane emissions have vowed to reduce their emissions by 30% by 2030. If methane-reduction pledges are met, the result would be equivalent to eliminating the GHG emissions from all of the world’s cars, trucks, buses and all two- and three-wheeled vehicles, according to the International Energy Agency.

    China, the world’s largest polluter by some measures, has not signed the deadline-based pledge, but has agreed to reduce methane emissions.

    Still largely voluntary

    COP27 talks wrapped without concrete progress on the contentious issue of shifting an overall 1.5 degrees Celsius temperature limit from a voluntary marker to an established requirement of nations. Most voluntary pacts among nations and private entities, including a vow by Amazon.com
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    ,
    Ford Motor
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    Apple
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    and others signing on to a “First Movers” pledge, loosly use the 1.5-degree limit set in 2015 when talks took place in Paris.

    Private banks, insurers and institutional investors representing $130 trillion said they would align their investments with the goal of keeping global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, toward a pledge to net-zero emissions economy-wide by 2050. Advocacy groups cheer the pledge and its expanding roster but are also keeping up pressure on the signatories to speed up progress toward this goal and to stop undermining the pledge with fossil-fuel investment.

    Read: Here’s where the big U.S. banks stand up and fall down on climate change

    The Egypt pact was also void of firmer language on emissions cutting and the desire by some officials to target all fossil fuels
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    for a phase-down.

    Natural gas, which is relatively cheaper to produce than other fossil fuels, has been the major alternative to more-polluting coal in electricity generation. Still, it has its own emissions risk.

    In the U.S., for example, electricity is the most common energy source used for cooking — electricity often powered by gas. Still, about 38% of U.S. households use natural gas directly for cooking, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

    Natural gas providers also own an established pipeline infrastructure that may serve alternative energy, and is pushed by the industry as a viable alternative alongside solar, wind
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      and other means. The industry also promotes its efforts to cap methane leaks.

    Related: World’s richest nations stick to 1.5-degree climate pledge despite energy crunch

    ‘It is more than frustrating to see overdue steps on mitigation and the phase-out of fossil energies being stonewalled by a number of large emitters and oil producers.’


    — Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock

    With fossil fuels in their sight, the European Union and other nations fought back at what they considered backsliding in the Egyptian presidency’s overarching cover agreement and threatened to scuttle the rest of the process, while advancing their own draft. The package was revised again, removing most of the elements Europeans had objected to but adding none of the heightened ambition they were hoping for, the AP said.

    Egypt has played a unique role as host, representative of Africa, which sits at the front lines of those hurt by climate change and yet, remaining loyal to its own fossil-fuel ambitions and those of OPEC nations.

    Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock voiced frustration.

    “It is more than frustrating to see overdue steps on mitigation and the phase-out of fossil energies being stonewalled by a number of large emitters and oil producers
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    ” she said.

    The agreement includes a veiled reference to the benefits of natural gas as low- emission energy, despite many nations calling for a phase down of natural gas, which does contribute to climate change.

    Fossil-fuel industry’s presence

    At least 636 representatives of the fossil fuel industry registered to attend the summit, a 25% increase over the industry’s presence last year, according to an analysis released by three advocacy groups.

    More fossil fuel lobbyists are on the roster than any single national delegation, besides the UAE who has registered 1,070 delegates compared to 176 last yearaccording to a report from Corporate Accountability, Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) and Global Witness (GW).

     Frances Colón, senior director for International Climate Policy at the Center for American Progress, found plenty of fault with this round of talks.

    “The final text reflects the outsized and corrupting presence of fossil fuel and big agricultural lobbyists at COP27, compounded by a lack of ambition from key, high-emitting countries,” she said, in a statement. “The agreement makes only a passing reference to the 1.5-degree Celsius warming goal and does not include any new language on phasing down or phasing out all fossil fuels
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    — the only way to reach emissions reduction goals and secure a livable future.”

    Colón also worried that the official statement did not adequately advance efforts. World leaders failed to reference the twin, interlocking crises of nature loss and climate change, and declined to link COP27 to next month’s U.N. biodiversity summit in Montreal.

    ‘The agreement makes only a passing reference to the 1.5-degree Celsius warming goal and does not include any new language on phasing down or phasing out all fossil fuels — the only way to reach emissions reduction goals and secure a livable future.’


    — Frances Colón of the Center for American Progress

    While the new agreement doesn’t ratchet up calls for reducing emissions, it does retain language to keep alive the voluntary global goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit). The Egyptian presidency kept offering proposals that harkened back to 2015 Paris language which also mentioned a looser goal of 2 degrees.

    This year’s pact also neglected to toughen the main sticking point from the previous COP, in Glasgow last year. At that time, China and India united to dig in unless coal language was softened. Nations this year did not expand on last year’s call to phase down global use of “unabated coal” even though India and other countries pushed to include oil and natural gas in language from Glasgow.

    “We joined with many parties to propose a number of measures that would have contributed to this emissions peaking before 2025, as the science tells us is necessary. Not in this text,” the United Kingdom’s Alok Sharma said.

    Climate campaigners are concerned that pushing for strong action to end fossil fuel use will be even harder at next year’s meeting, which will be hosted in Dubai, located in the oil-rich United Arab Emirates.

    The Associated Press contributed.

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  • Alia Bhatt to expand her Ed-a-Mamma business to UAE, Europe next year

    Alia Bhatt to expand her Ed-a-Mamma business to UAE, Europe next year

    Bollywood actor Alia Bhatt plans to expand her fashion direct-to-consumer (D2C) startup Ed-a-Mamma’s business to UAE and Europe next year.

    The actor told PTI that Ed-a-Mamma is her first entrepreneurial venture which focuses on sustainable clothing for kids at affordable price points.

    “I would like to focus on expanding outside India and add more categories to the brand. We started with a kids wear brand and are launching maternity wear this year.

    “I would like to expand more into the infant segment. I would like to even add more vertical categories in and around the space of family care,” Bhatt said when asked about her plans for the next two-three years.

    Ed-a-Mamma was started in October 2020, after Bhatt saw a lack of presence of a world class home-grown brand providing sustainable clothing options for kids at affordable prices.

    The company has been selling through online platforms like FirstCry, AJIO, Myntra etc.

    When asked about international business plans, the actor said “UAE is first on our list. Once that gets kicked off, I think by next year, we should be up and kicking in UAE and then kind of expand to Europe as well. Maybe, a year after that, focus on the rest of the world,” Bhatt said.

    The actor has put a team of 60 people to work at the company.

    Ed-a-Mamma started with 160 options and now has over 1,800 options, which has been designed and made by the company at its own facility, she said.

    “In the first two years, I did not associate my name with the brand to test if the product will sell on its own or not. In the last three months our sales have gone up by 10 times. Now we are getting into retail. We have partnered with Lifestyle and Shoppers Stop. Our products will be available at 40 outlets by the end of this month,” Bhatt said.

    The actor said that along with the business, Ed-a-Mamma, as a brand, is more about storytelling to create better understanding of the planet and make children more sensitive about it.

    “You are investing in children because you want them to be more sensitive towards the planet and the generations to come should also have the same ethos. The storytelling should tie-in from all aspects. While retail is one part of it, education and storytelling is another part of it. That’s also something that I would like to look at,” Bhatt said. 
     

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  • Nirmala Sitharaman to visit US for annual meetings of the IMF-World Bank

    Nirmala Sitharaman to visit US for annual meetings of the IMF-World Bank

    Union Minister for Finance & Corporate Affairs Nirmala Sitharaman will visit USA on October 11, 2022. During her visit, Sitharaman will attend the Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governor (FMCBG) Meetings.

    The Finance Minister will take part in bilateral meetings with countries like Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Australia, Bhutan, New Zealand, Egypt, Germany, Mauritius, UAE, Iran and Netherlands. She will hold one-on-one meetings with leaders & heads of OECD, European Commission and UNDP. The Finance Minister is also scheduled to meet the US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and David Malpass, President, World Bank separately to discuss issues of mutual interest.

     Sitharaman will deliberate on the multiplier effects created in India through the interlinkages of ‘Technology, Finance and Governance’ at the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), John Hopkins University during the visit.

    “During the latter part of the visit, the Union Finance Minister will attend roundtable meetings with USIBC and USISPF on themes to ‘Strengthen Investment and Innovation in India-US Corridor’ and “Investing in India’s Digital Revolution”. These meetings are aimed at showcasing India’s attractiveness as an investment destination and will have the participation of leading business leaders and investors,” the Finance Ministry stated.

    Also read: Paytm sees a big jump in loan disbursals, run rate reaches Rs 34,000 cr in September

    Also read: PM Modi announces new international airport for Gujarat’s Bharuch

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  • The Washington Outsider’s Irina Tsukerman Moderates UNHRC 50th Panel: Yemen Coalition of Independent Women Exposes Houthi Abuses as Regional and Global Security Risks

    The Washington Outsider’s Irina Tsukerman Moderates UNHRC 50th Panel: Yemen Coalition of Independent Women Exposes Houthi Abuses as Regional and Global Security Risks

    Press Release


    Jun 21, 2022

    Gathering on the sidelines of the 50th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), the Yemen Coalition of Independent Women and its partner organizations, including The Washington Outsider, addressed the nexus between the human rights violations by the Iran-backed Houthi militias (Ansar Allah) in Yemen and the security risks to the region and the international community. At the June 17 symposium on human rights abuses in Yemen, Senior Director for Countering Extremism Dr. Hans Jacob Schindler discussed the Houthi threats to regional and global security by the use of ballistic missiles against Yemen’s residential areas and displacement camps, and attacks on economic infrastructure and vital installations in Saudi Arabia and UAE. 

    Addressing Iran’s arming, training, funding, and political support for Ansar Allah and the Houthi connections to other Iranian proxies in the region, Dr. Schindler confirmed that the Houthis had received material support and training from Iran and the Lebanese Hezbollah militia, and that Yemen had become a testing ground for Iran and Hezbollah. Dr. Schindler asserted that the Houthis represented a real threat to international navigation in the Red Sea by transforming public ports into operational centers through which international shipping lines, commercial and humanitarian vessels were targeted, booby-trapped, and pirated.

    In the June 19th seminar on Houthi violations against media freedom, Irina Tsukerman, who moderated the panel, stated that Houthis use cyberspace to raise funds and to block anti-Houthi websites, and to spy on citizens. She added that the Houthis used communications and information technology and infrastructure they controlled to support military operations. The Houthi punished the Yemeni people and cut off internet service in 2018 from 80% of the area of Yemen. The Houthi control of the main internet provider in the country gave them information monopoly and frustrated resistance. Tsukerman stressed that Houthi control of the internet isolates the Yemeni population from the rest of the world, citing the importance of helping Yemen restore internet access and end militia control as a necessary priority to end the war. 

    Keith Boyfield, Senior Fellow at the Euro-Gulf Information Centre, addressed the potential environmental disaster resulting from the ticking time bomb of the trapped FSO Safer oil carrier near the Hodeidah port. He also spoke of child soldier recruitment and hate indoctrination, which prolongs the conflict, creating generations of dedicated fighters.

    The seminar also discussed the impact of the arbitrary detentions, torture, and assaults on journalists, the bans of media outlets, and the hacking and cell phone searches and seizures, as well as the impact on information flow about security and on digital rights in Yemen.

    Media contact: Irina Tsukerman

    sicat222@gmail.com

    Source: The Washington Outsider

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  • Ryelle Strategy Group Partners With the Sheikh Khalifa Government Excellence Program to Launch the First-Ever Virtual Government Excellence Assessment Program

    Ryelle Strategy Group Partners With the Sheikh Khalifa Government Excellence Program to Launch the First-Ever Virtual Government Excellence Assessment Program

    Program brings together more than 100 global experts to promote excellence practices in federal government entities

    Press Release



    updated: Mar 29, 2021

    Ryelle Strategy Group, an industry-leading excellence assessment and strategy execution firm, has announced a strategic partnership with the Sheikh Khalifa Government Excellence Program of the federal government of the United Arab Emirates to deliver its first-ever virtual government excellence program. 

    Ryelle will recruit and deliver more than 100 subject matter experts from around the world with expertise in strategy, innovation, education, finance, infrastructure, energy, climate, healthcare, among other disciplines, to deliver this mandate. This group will assess the operations of more than 30 government entities to establish excellence standards, promote knowledge sharing and capacity building and integrate industry-leading best practices with the ultimate objective of helping the government improve their efficiency and shape the future of their entities. 

    “It is an honour to have been chosen as the partner by the federal government of the UAE in moving this established government excellence platform to a digital context,” said Carol Kotacka, Managing Director of Ryelle Strategy Group. “Running the program virtually for the first time ever allows us to maximize all facets of international best practices and take full advantage of a global network of subject matter experts like never before. We will be drawing on our extensive network to add to our globally recognized team of experts to ensure that we will be able to choose from the best and brightest from around the world.” 

    About Ryelle Strategy Group
    Ryelle Strategy Group is a boutique consulting firm that specializes in excellence assessment and strategy execution across private, public and non-profit sectors both in the field and via virtual platforms. From client/patient/customer experience mapping, knowledge mobilization and market intelligence to stakeholder engagement, brand management and the creation of new platforms, Ryelle Strategy Group’s mission is to enable connection, collaboration and co-creation within organizations to achieve outcomes. Learn more at www.ryellegroup.com

    About the Sheikh Khalifa Government Excellence Program
    Sheikh Khalifa Government Excellence Program aims to develop excellence practices of the federal government through the adoption of the modern fundamentals and principles of excellence and raise awareness about excellence in government work, guiding and developing government entities capabilities through sharing of knowledge and best practices that encourage disruptive innovation and consolidate quality concepts and leadership excellence. Learn more at https://www.skgep.gov.ae/en/programme

    Contact
    Carol Kotacka, Managing Partner
    International Recruitment
    Ryelle Strategy Group
    contractor@ryellegroup.com 
     

    Source: Ryelle Strategy Group

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  • Intercultural Dialogue in Dubai

    Intercultural Dialogue in Dubai

    The interchange of common cultural knowledge in the wake of the historical UAE-Israel deal.

    Press Release



    updated: Sep 10, 2020

    The Abrahamic Business Circle organized a visit to the cultural museum in Dubai to commensurate with the Abrahamic Accord by fostering tolerance and interchange of intercultural dialogue.

    H.E. Ahmed Obaid Al Mansoori, the founder of Crossroad of Civilizations Museum in Dubai, hosted on the 8th of September of this year a group of representatives of the Jewish Community and the founding members of The Abrahamic Business Circle. The Jewish group was led by the Rabbi of the Jewish Community of the UAE, R. Levi Duchman, while The Abrahamic Business Circle was represented by the Founder, Chairman Raphael Nagel, and the Co-Founder, Dr. Tillmann C. Lauk. H.E. Ahmed Obaid Al Mansoori exclusively showcased the history and culture of the UAE and hosted the intercultural dialogue at the museum.

    During the visit, the group had the opportunity to capture His Excellency’s profound knowledge of the history and cultural evolution of the UAE. Rich traditional culture and unique pieces of history were beautifully gathered in one place. Following the tour, there was an extensive exchange of common cultural knowledge that ended with a common prayer from all of the participants in all three major Abrahamic faith.

    Together, everyone was praying accordingly to his own faith in unity—an unimaginable event with an overwhelming grip of emotions that proved Dubai is the capital of tolerance in the world.

    ###

    About The Abrahamic Business Circle

    The Abrahamic Business Circle (“The ABC”) aims to present an innovative global interfaith entrepreneurial dialogue forum. Our organization wants to boost long-standing relationships among goodwill people of all faiths within a high-level business environment. Accordingly, multi-faith business leaders come together under an umbrella that is made of tolerance, cooperation and reliance of one to another. The ABC’s initiatives will generate huge opportunities not only in culture but also in economic exchanges.

    Contact:

    Strawberry Fernandez

    Executive Assistant

    +971 54 445 1408

    contact@theabrahamicbusinesscircle.com​

    Source: Abrahamic Business Circle

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