Israel buys Google ads to discredit UNRWA: Report

Some Google employees have expressed concerns that the company chose not to block these ads due to potential implications for future business with Israel. (AFP/File)
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Updated 28 August 2024
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Israel buys Google ads to discredit UNRWA: Report

  • Wired investigation found Israel paid Google to place ads that accuse UNRWA of having links to Hamas
  • Google said campaign is compliant with its policies but reserves the right to block ads

LONDON: Israel has reportedly purchased advertising space on Google to discredit the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, according to a recent investigation by Wired.

The investigation revealed that the Israeli Government Advertising Agency paid Google to place ads that accuse UNRWA of having links to Hamas.

These ads reportedly appear at the top of search results for terms such as “UNRWA” and related queries, aiming to undermine the agency’s credibility.

“There is an incredibly powerful campaign to dismantle UNRWA,” said Mara Kronenfeld, executive director of UNRWA USA.

“I want the public to know what’s happening and the insidious nature of it, especially at a time when civilian lives are under attack in Gaza.”

In January, Israel accused 12 members of UNRWA’s 30,000-strong staff of participating in the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on southern Israel.

However, these allegations were largely dismissed following an independent UN investigation, which criticized Tel Aviv for failing to provide any supporting evidence.

Despite the lack of substantiation, the accusations led several countries to suspend funding to UNRWA during a critical period in the conflict.

Most of these donor nations have since resumed their contributions, despite Israeli pressure to defund and dismantle the agency.

The Wired investigation suggested that Israel’s ad campaign began shortly after these allegations surfaced.

From May to July, when users searched for over 300 terms related to UNRWA, Israel’s ads appeared 44 percent of the time, compared to UNRWA USA’s ads, which appeared only 34 percent of the time.

The Israeli ads directed users to a government-run website alleging that UNRWA had failed to declare whether employing Hamas members violated its neutrality.
According to Wired, Google had removed some Israeli ads in January that misleadingly bore titles like “UNRWA for Human Rights” after complaints from the aid agency.

However, new ads with different titles have since resumed, despite repeated requests from UNRWA staff to remove what they consider a misinformation campaign.

Google has maintained that the campaign is legitimate, arguing that governments are permitted to run campaigns and that the company reserves the right to block ads on search topics it deems “sensitive” and non-compliant with its policies.

Some Google employees have expressed concerns that the company chose not to block these ads due to potential implications for future business with Israel.

Despite Israel’s efforts to undermine UNRWA, the agency reported a record 78,000 donors by August of this year, the highest since its founding in 1949.

UNRWA was established in the aftermath of the Nakba — the displacement of 750,000 Palestinians during the creation of Israel — to provide healthcare, education, and humanitarian aid to Palestinian refugees in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon.

Today, UNRWA is the second-largest employer in Gaza after Hamas, with 13,000 of its 30,000 employees based in the Gaza Strip.

The agency operates 183 schools, 22 health facilities, and seven women’s centers, serving a vital role in the besieged enclave. UNRWA’s schools educate 286,645 students in Gaza, and its medical facilities receive 3.4 million visits per year, according to UN data.


Meme-lord Gavin Newsom riles Republicans with Trump-trolling posts

Updated 21 August 2025
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Meme-lord Gavin Newsom riles Republicans with Trump-trolling posts

  • California governor has been parodying Trump with a series of posts written in the Republican leader’s distinct style that he hopes will show his Democratic Party how to beat the social media master at his own game

WASHINGTON: All-caps hyperbole, wild accusations and idiosyncratic spelling: not just an average Wednesday on Donald Trump’s Truth Social feed, but a new digital media strategy for California Governor Gavin Newsom that is delighting Democrats — and riling Republicans.
Newsom — hotly-tipped for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination — has been parodying Trump with a series of posts written in the Republican leader’s distinct style that he hopes will show his party how to beat the social media master at his own game.
In recent weeks the governor has posted all manner of manipulated images depicting him in the kind of over-the-top vignettes popular among Trump’s “MAGA” movement — superimposing his face on Mount Rushmore and appearing to pray with MAGA favorites Tucker Carlson, Kid Rock and Hulk Hogan.
When Trump’s one-word weekend post — saying simply “Bela” — left the president’s supporters scratching their heads, Newsom posted a screenshot alongside his own caption: “DONALD (TINY HANDS), HAS WRITTEN HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHY THIS MORNING — UNFORTUNATELY (LOW IQ) HE SPELLED IT WRONG — ‘BETA.’“

The 57-year-old Democrat mocked Trump’s salesman-like rhetorical style in a post about redistricting plans that he said had led “MANY” people to call him “GAVIN CHRISTOPHER ‘COLUMBUS’ NEWSOM (BECAUSE OF THE MAPS!).”
And he has taken to ending his posts with the much-mocked sign-off that Trump, 79, made famous: “THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER!“
The tweets have quickly gained currency among Newsom’s supporters, who have shared their own “Trumpian” memes of a shirtless Newsom with bulging muscles, brandishing pistols or riding into battle on a velociraptor.

The governor called Trump’s late-night social media tirades “pathetic,” telling historian and podcast host Heather Cox Richardson that people who normally “can’t stand” politicians had been reaching out to compliment his new approach.
“And they’re maybe paying attention to the childishness that is Donald Trump, that we’ve allowed him to normalize — the way he communicates, talking down to us, looking past us,” Newsom said.
“I’ve got kids, and I’ve got a whole generation of people who thinks this is normal. It is not, and it can’t be normalized, and that’s big part of what we’re also pushing back against.”

The posts are garnering the attention of X’s algorithm while sparking the ire of Republicans, conservative-leaning political commentators and the right-wing media.
Dana Perino, an anchor on Fox News, slammed Newsom’s new strategy, telling viewers: “If I were his wife, I would say you are making a fool of yourself, stop it.”
“NDS — Newsom Derangement Syndrome is a real thing,” Republican political consultant Mike Madrid posted on X, retooling the Republican accusation of “Trump Derangement Syndrome” levied to dismiss criticism of the president.

The snark appears to be working.
The number of followers of Newsom’s official press office account on X — where the cheeky announcement are being posted — has soared by 450 percent since mid-June, according to CNN, with huge strides also seen on Instagram and TikTok.
Daily Google searches for Newsom are up 500 percent since August 1, the network reported.
Newsom says the MAGA-coded posts are not only annoying Republicans, but redefining how Democrats can provide an effective opposition to one of the most media-savvy leaders ever to occupy the White House.

Asked for comment, the White House shared with AFP an image it had initially sent US publication Politico repurposing a scene from the show “Mad Men” to demonstrate that Trump is not just unfazed, but doesn’t think about Newsom at all.
Politico had called it the first official White House press statement delivered exclusively in meme form.
Jeff Le, a deputy cabinet secretary for previous California governor Jerry Brown, said Newsom was responding to widespread discontent at the Democratic Party’s perceived lack of fight when it comes to Trump — and the yawning leadership vacuum.
“His messaging has helped introduce him in a tongue-and-cheek manner that reflects the inside joke that many digital native Democrats understand,” Le told AFP.
But he added that the strategy was “not without risk.”
“If there is a terrible natural disaster — a catastrophic fire or mudslide — it’s fair to say that the White House keeps score,” he said, “and the president may be less inclined to provide timely federal government support and funding for the response.”
 


Police disperse pro-Palestinian staff protests at Microsoft HQ in Washington

Updated 20 August 2025
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Police disperse pro-Palestinian staff protests at Microsoft HQ in Washington

  • No Azure for Apartheid group occupied Microsoft’s East Campus in Redmond, demanding the company end its ties with Israel.
  • Microsoft is accused of complicity in war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank

WASHINGTON: Police dismantled a protest encampment set up by current and former Microsoft employees at the tech giant’s headquarters in Redmond, Washington, over the company’s cloud services being used by the Israeli military for surveillance operations against Palestinians.

Members of the worker-led campaign group, No Azure for Apartheid, occupied Microsoft’s East Campus in Redmond on Tuesday, demanding the company end its ties with Israel. The group accused Microsoft of complicity in war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank through its support of Israeli military and intelligence operations.

“In establishing the Liberated Zone, we are liberating our workplace and reclaiming our labor by refusing to do any work that could contribute to genocide and other crimes against humanity in Palestine,” said Microsoft worker Julius Shan in a letter to the company on Tuesday.

“We choose to take this step to escalate against Microsoft’s active role in powering 22 months of genocide in Palestine,” he added.

Microsoft workers occupy HQ in protest against company’s ties to Israeli military. (Supplied)

The protests follow a recent investigation by The Guardian with the Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and Hebrew-language outlet Local Call, which revealed that Microsoft’s Azure cloud services were being used by Israeli authorities to facilitate mass surveillance of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. The system reportedly enabled the storage of millions of daily mobile phone call recordings made by Palestinians and assisted in identifying bombing targets in Gaza.

On Friday, Microsoft said it launched an “urgent” external inquiry into the allegations as executives denied their knowledge of the nature of Israel’s use of Azure technology. In a statement, Microsoft said “using Azure for the storage of data files of phone calls obtained through broad or mass surveillance of civilians in Gaza and the West Bank” would be prohibited by its terms of service.

Responding to the announcement, the “No Azure for Apartheid” group described the inquiry as “yet another tactic to delay” meeting its demands.

The group demanded that Microsoft ends sales, deals and services to all Israeli entities, call for a ceasefire and an end to the starvation in Gaza, pay reparations to the Palestinians, and end discrimination against pro-Palestinian workers.

Hossam Nasr, one of the group’s organizers, told Arab News that Tuesday’s encampment aimed to be reminiscent of the US student-led protests at prominent universities last year. However, police officers interrupted the protests after two hours, saying the demonstrators trespassed private property and therefore were subject to arrest.

In a statement to Arab News, a Microsoft spokesperson said: “The group was asked to leave, and they left.”

The demonstrators moved to a nearby public sidewalk as police officers and Microsoft security dismantled the encampment activities.

In the company’s plaza, demonstrators paid artistic tributes to the Palestinian victims in Gaza and held placards that read “Join The Worker Intifada – No Labor for Genocide” targeted at Microsoft. They set up tents and a negotiation table with a large banner that read “Microsoft Execs, Come to the Table.”

The space was also filled with shrouds symbolizing the dead in Gaza, and a large plate reading, “Stop Starving Gaza.”

Police dismantled protest encampment set up by current and former Microsoft employees over the company’s ties to Israeli military. (Supplied)

The protests come amid growing pressure on the US tech giant from Microsoft employees and investors over its ties to the Israeli military and the role its technologies have played in the 22-month war on Gaza.

Earlier in April during Microsoft’s 50th anniversary celebration, an employee interrupted a panel between CEO Satya Nadella, former CEO Steve Ballmer and founder Bill Gates. Another disrupted an address from AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman. Both employees were fired.

Nasr, and another organizer, Abdo Mohamed, told Arab News they were terminated for organizing what the tech giant called an “unauthorized” vigil at Microsoft’s Redmond headquarters for Palestinians killed during the war in Gaza.

In response to the mounting criticism, Microsoft launched a investigation earlier this year. In May, the company said it had “found no evidence to date” the Israeli military had failed to comply with its terms of service or used Azure “to target or harm people” in Gaza. 

It said it provides Israel’s Ministry of Defense with software, professional services, Azure cloud services, and Azure AI services such as language translation, as well as cybersecurity support, but denied these technologies are used to target civilians. However, the company acknowledged its limited visibility into how its technology is deployed on private or on-premises systems.


Gaza journalist Motaz Azaiza reunites with Nada Jwaifel, survivor from iconic photo

Updated 20 August 2025
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Gaza journalist Motaz Azaiza reunites with Nada Jwaifel, survivor from iconic photo

  • Israel airstrike had severely injured Jwaifel, killed 7 siblings and grandmother
  • Jwaifel, 19, blasts Tel Aviv for taking ‘everything precious,’ but ‘never break my spirit’

LONDON: Almost two years after capturing the iconic image of Nada Jwaifel that became one of Time magazine’s Top 10 photos of 2023, Palestinian journalist Motaz Azaiza has reunited with the young woman who was pulled from the rubble of an Israeli airstrike in Gaza.

Azaiza met Jwaifel, 19, this week in Washington D.C., where she is receiving medical treatment.

The photo, which showed her trapped under the rubble of her destroyed home at Al-Nuseirat refugee camp, helped spark the global outpouring of support and mobilize the urgent medical intervention that saved her life.

Azaiza had been documenting the work of Gaza’s Civil Defense teams in late October 2023 when he found Jwaifel buried beneath the remains of an eight-story building flattened by an Israeli airstrike. Seven of her siblings and her grandmother were killed in the attack.

“It was the light from my camera flash that discovered her,” Azaiza said in an earlier Instagram post.

 

 

Jwaifel was critically injured, with her legs pinned under concrete. Doctors had warned that immediate amputation would be necessary unless urgent treatment was secured.

When the photo gained global attention, the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund quickly launched efforts to evacuate her for treatment abroad.

Following 75 surgeries across four countries, Jwaifel eventually underwent a complex 16-hour nerve and muscle transplant at Johns Hopkins Hospital in the US that saved her legs from amputation.

“It’s painful to be in her place. It’s painful to see her,” Azaiza said in a previous interview with Time magazine.

“She’s so lucky she survived. What about people who, there was no hole for me to see them and they (were) still stuck under the rubble and they passed with no help.”

Now able to walk again, Jwaifel joined Azaiza at a PCRF event in Washington, where she spoke of her journey.

“Israel might have taken everything precious to me — my family, my home, my peace — but it will never never break my spirit, as long as I can breathe.”


Saudi academy launches media training program in Switzerland

Updated 19 August 2025
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Saudi academy launches media training program in Switzerland

  • Held in collaboration with EHL Hospitality Business School, the launch included the signing of a MOU between the academy and EHL
  • Agreement aims to foster international collaboration and cultural exchange, supporting the ministry’s goal of empowering national media talent

RIYADH: The Saudi Media Academy of the Ministry of Media launched the first phase of its Media Leaders Track in Switzerland through an intensive global event management training program.

Held in collaboration with EHL Hospitality Business School, the launch included the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the academy and EHL.

The ceremony was attended by the assistant minister of media and chairman of the academy’s board, Abdullah Al-Maghlouth, along with other officials, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Tuesday.

The agreement aims to foster international collaboration and cultural exchange, supporting the ministry’s goal of empowering national media talent. It was signed by the academy’s CEO, Khalid Zain Al-Abdeen, and EHL associate dean, Stephane Haddad.

The five-day training camp offers hands-on workshops led by international experts and site visits to world-class event institutions. It focuses on planning, organizing, and executing major events, team leadership, and audience engagement.

This is the first practical phase of a four-stage track, followed by a digital advertising course in Riyadh, an international media camp in Singapore, and a final advanced leadership communication course.

Targeting professionals and creatives across sectors, the program aims to enhance media presence, improve management of national events, and strengthen Saudi Arabia’s global representation.


D360 Bank signs strategic agreement with Thmanyah as banking partner for broadcasting Saudi Football League tournaments

Updated 18 August 2025
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D360 Bank signs strategic agreement with Thmanyah as banking partner for broadcasting Saudi Football League tournaments

RIYADH: D360 Bank, the Saudi Shariah-compliant digital bank, has announced its exclusive partnership with Thmanyah, part of the Saudi Research & Media Group (SRMG), for the landmark broadcast rights of the Kingdom’s most prestigious football tournaments.

This partnership positions D360 Bank as the exclusive financial player reshaping the sports broadcasting scene, securing a distinctive presence in the largest and most prominent regional sporting event. It delivers impactful access to a massive and highly engaged audience year-round, while strengthening the bank’s association with the finest Arabic content on the internet.

The agreement covers the Saudi Pro League (Roshn League), Saudi Super Cup, and First Division League (Yelo League), along with a broad range of sports-related Thmanyah content. 

Through this collaboration, D360 Bank is championing the future of sports entertainment by offering fans unprecedented control and insight into every match. 

Viewers will be able to simultaneously stream up to three games, access in-depth analytics and real-time insights, instantly rewind key moments, and enjoy crisp, high-definition streaming at 50 frames per second. 

Tiered viewing packages will ensure that every viewer is catered to, delivering a personalized and immersive football experience.

The partnership reflects D360 Bank’s strategy of aligning with homegrown innovators who share its commitment to community, culture, and progress. By investing in sports, the bank aims to extend its role beyond financial services to become a driver of shared experiences that bring people together.