作者: admin

  • Egypt pressing Al-Azhar ‘to back UAE’ against Iran, sources say

    Egypt pressing Al-Azhar ‘to back UAE’ against Iran, sources say

    Behind the public-facing statements of one of Sunni Islam’s most influential institutions lies a story of political pressure, national economic interests, and shifting regional alliances, multiple anonymous sources with direct knowledge of the matter have revealed. Egypt’s presidential administration has explicitly pressured Al-Azhar, the Cairo-based leading center of Sunni Islamic learning, to publicly align with the United Arab Emirates and other Gulf nations in their ongoing confrontation with Iran, according to security sources and insiders close to Al-Azhar’s Grand Imam Ahmed al-Tayeb.

    Since the outbreak of the latest round of regional conflict, Al-Azhar has released four official public statements, with one explicitly branding Iranian strikes on UAE territory as “the aggression of the Islamic Republic of Iran against its Muslim neighbour, the United Arab Emirates”. What is notable in all four statements, however, is the complete absence of any condemnation of American or Israeli strikes targeting Iran. This marks a clear departure from the institution’s position during 2023’s regional conflict, when it openly labeled attacks on Iran as “the aggression of the occupying entity against the Islamic Republic of Iran”.

    Sources confirm that Al-Azhar’s 2023 stance triggered significant anger from UAE officials, even though no Gulf territory had been attacked at that point. The Emirati daily Al-Khaleej publicly launched criticism of Grand Imam Tayeb over his position last year. From the very start of the current conflict, Egyptian state agencies issued a clear mandate to Al-Azhar: align unreservedly with Gulf allies and avoid any reference to U.S. or Israeli strikes on Iran, senior leadership sources within Al-Azhar told Middle East Eye.

    One senior source shared the explicit message delivered by Egypt’s presidential institution: “It was stated plainly and directly by the presidential institution that there are major interests with the Gulf and the US that we cannot sacrifice under the current economic conditions, that what happened over Gaza cannot be repeated, and that Al-Azhar would bear the blame for the Egyptians who lose their jobs in the Gulf if it takes a contrary position.” This is not the first time such pressure has been applied: MEE previously reported that Egyptian authorities used identical tactics last year to force Al-Azhar to withdraw a statement calling for global intervention to address famine in Gaza. At that time, the state threatened to hold Al-Azhar responsible for derailing ceasefire efforts and blocking humanitarian aid from entering the enclave.

    Gulf officials have also held direct meetings with Tayeb, framing their narrative of regional harm from Iranian actions, which sources describe as having been “greatly exaggerated”. A closer look at Al-Azhar’s four released statements reveals the carefully calibrated alignment that resulted. The first, issued on March 2, called for an immediate end to hostilities and an end to further bloodshed, while rejecting violations of Arab state sovereignty—but made no mention of Iran by name. The second, released March 17, explicitly condemned Iran’s “unjustified attacks” against a list of nations including all six Gulf Cooperation Council states, as well as Jordan, Iraq, Turkey and Azerbaijan. The third statement, dated April 9, warned the “occupying entity”—Al-Azhar’s longstanding term for Israel—against attempts to inflame regional tensions and violate the temporary truce, noting that a lack of international accountability had emboldened further criminal acts, but made no reference to strikes on Iranian soil. The most explicit statement, released May 5, singled out “the aggression of the Islamic Republic of Iran against its Muslim neighbour, the United Arab Emirates” for condemnation.

    Sources close to the Egyptian presidency defend the pressure campaign, arguing that Al-Azhar is an inherent part of the Egyptian state apparatus, and unifying its public position is a critical necessity tied to Egypt’s core national interests with Gulf states. Gulf governments have themselves been closely monitoring Al-Azhar’s positions and raised the issue directly during high-level diplomatic talks throughout the current conflict, the Egyptian sources added. The close personal relationship between Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi and UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, paired with Egypt’s deep-seated economic reliance on Emirati investment and support, made a targeted statement condemning Iranian strikes on the UAE a non-negotiable requirement, they noted.

    MEE has not been able to independently verify the anonymous accounts provided by multiple sources. Requests for comment from Al-Azhar, the office of the Egyptian president, and the office of the UAE president have not yet received a response.

    Even with this shift on the Iran-Gulf confrontation, sources note that previous pressure campaigns from Egypt and Gulf governments—led by the UAE—have failed to change Al-Azhar’s longstanding stance on Palestinian armed factions, which the institution continues to publicly support. That difference of opinion has drawn pushback from Palestinian leadership: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas personally called Tayeb to argue that Al-Azhar’s pro-faction stance benefited political groups outside the Palestinian Authority’s official decision-making framework. Sources say the Grand Imam rejected this characterization during the call, prompting Abbas to take his complaint directly to President Sisi. The Palestinian Authority has not responded to MEE’s request for comment on the matter.

    Insiders close to Tayeb have also pushed back against claims that the UAE’s 2019 mediation of a domestic crisis surrounding the Grand Imam has influenced Al-Azhar’s current position. At that time, Egyptian media reported that President Sisi planned to remove Tayeb from his post through constitutional amendments governing Al-Azhar’s leadership, and that UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan stepped in to mediate the dispute, preserving the existing constitutional framework in exchange for the removal of two senior officials close to Tayeb. But Al-Azhar sources say the UAE’s role in that 2019 crisis has been widely overstated.

    They explain that the UAE did not object to Tayeb’s removal in principle, but was dissatisfied with the proposed replacement candidates, judging that none could match Tayeb’s global standing in countering extremism and promoting a moderate interpretation of Islam—an area where Egypt and the UAE had once cooperated extensively. That cooperation slowed dramatically after the UAE normalized relations with Israel in 2020 as part of the U.S.-brokered Abraham Accords, and today is limited to only specific narrow policy areas, with the condition that Al-Azhar avoid taking any public stance on issues involving Israel, insiders added. In the 2019 crisis, real support for preserving Tayeb’s position came from within Egyptian state agencies, the sources confirmed.

    Those opposing agencies leaked news of the planned removal at the exact moment Tayeb was signing the landmark Document on Human Fraternity with Pope Francis, a timing calculated to frame the removal as punishment for Tayeb’s outreach and openness. The leak sparked public demonstrations in Luxor, Tayeb’s hometown and the base of his family, where protesters rallied holding the Grand Imam’s portrait. Widespread public pushback was paired with formal objections from Southeast Asian Muslim-majority nations, and private messages to Sisi from multiple African heads of state during a continental tour. This led Sisi to conclude that he had been misled by advisers hostile to Tayeb, sources say. After those advisers were removed from their posts, relations between the presidency and the Grand Imam recovered.

  • Melbourne’s Chapel St among those to go through new 30km/h speed limit trial

    Melbourne’s Chapel St among those to go through new 30km/h speed limit trial

    In a major push to cut road fatalities and improve shared street safety for all users, the Allan Government of Victoria, Australia, has allocated more than $860,000 in new grants to local councils to roll out 30-kilometer-per-hour speed limit trials across high-traffic and community-focused streets, including one of Melbourne’s most famous thoroughfares, Chapel Street.

    As the latest round of investments under the state’s $28.7 million Safe Local Roads and Streets Program, the funding supports 100 new safety projects, bringing the total number of active initiatives under the program to more than 430. The largest single grant in this round, totaling $344,000, has gone to Merri-Bek Council to support its local speed reduction plans. Stonnington Council has received $331,000 to implement the 30km/h limit on Chapel Street, as well as nearby Ewart Street and Osborne Avenue, with an additional $64,000 allocated to expand the 30km/h trial across Melbourne’s inner southeast.

    Further south, Bass Coast Council has secured $122,000 to establish new 30km/h zones across four popular coastal communities: Surf Beach, Smiths Beach, Sunset Strip and Silverleaves. The government has also approved a speed reduction proposal from Geelong Council for Portarlington Street in the regional city of Geelong.

    Beyond speed limit adjustments, the program funds a range of other evidence-based road safety upgrades, including the installation of new speed bumps and targeted improvements to bicycle infrastructure across the state. All projects are led by local councils, with state government grants covering implementation costs, aligned with Victoria’s broader long-term Road Safety Strategy.

    Road Safety Minister Ros Spence emphasized that the partnership between the state and local governments is focused on delivering tangible, on-the-ground improvements to roads that Victorians rely on daily. “These projects will make local streets safer for drivers, pedestrians and cyclists right across the state,” Spence said.

    The state’s Road Safety Strategy sets two ambitious public safety targets: cutting the number of annual road deaths in half by 2030, and eliminating all road fatalities entirely by 2050. Officials note that reduced speed limits in dense, high-foot-traffic areas have been shown to dramatically lower the risk of severe injury and death in the event of a collision, making the trials a core component of the strategy’s early implementation.

  • Taiwan Travelogue, a love letter to food and adventure, wins International Booker Prize

    Taiwan Travelogue, a love letter to food and adventure, wins International Booker Prize

    In a landmark moment for global translated literature, *Taiwan Travelogue* — a textured story of forbidden romance and Taiwanese culinary culture created by Taiwanese author Yang Shuang-zi and translated by Taiwanese-American translator Lin King — has claimed the 2025 International Booker Prize, marking the first time a work translated from Mandarin Chinese has earned the prestigious literary honor.

    Framed as a rediscovered 1930s travel memoir, complete with fictional scholarly footnotes, the novel fooled many readers into believing it was an authentic historical document when it was first published in its original Mandarin in 2020. Set against the backdrop of Japanese colonial rule over Taiwan, the narrative follows two central characters: Aoyama Chizuko, a fictional Japanese writer on a state-sponsored tour of the island, and O Chizuru, her Taiwanese translator, as the two women develop a deep romantic connection against a landscape of shifting cultural and political power dynamics.

    Natasha Brown, chair of this year’s International Booker judging panel, praised the work as a “captivating, slyly sophisticated novel” that weaves together themes of love, cultural identity, colonial history, and structural power through the shared experiences of its protagonists. Beyond its historical and emotional core, food is a central narrative thread: the story unfolds as a culinary journey across the island, inviting readers to taste the rich, diverse foodways of 1930s Taiwan alongside the main characters. Speaking ahead of the award announcement, Yang joked that her deep research into the book’s travel and food themes reshaped her life in two memorable ways: “My savings went down; my weight went up.”

    The win for *Taiwan Travelogue* is the latest in a string of accolades for the work and its creators. Yang, a 41-year-old versatile writer who also pens essays, manga, and video game scripts, already took home Taiwan’s highest literary honor, the Golden Tripod Award, for the original Mandarin version in 2021. Lin King’s English translation, meanwhile, won the U.S. National Book Award for Translated Literature in 2024.

    In her pre-win remarks, Lin King highlighted the nuanced perspective the novel brings to Taiwan’s colonial history, emphasizing that it avoids reducing the era to only trauma. She noted that the book strikes a careful balance between acknowledging the hardships of colonial rule and honoring the ordinary joys of daily life: “No matter how difficult times are, I believe that humans always manage to find flickers of levity and deep wells of love. There was still humour, good food, movies, school, petty fights, and romance. To suggest otherwise is to reduce a culture to its trauma.”

    In their official statement announcing the win, judges highlighted the vital, underrecognized work of literary translation, confirming that the full £50,000 (approximately $67,000) prize purse will be split equally between author Yang and translator Lin King, recognizing both creators’ essential contributions to the finished work. The historic win opens new doors for Mandarin-language literature on the global stage, cementing *Taiwan Travelogue*’s place as a landmark work of contemporary world literature.

  • Woman dies after falling into uncovered New York City manhole

    Woman dies after falling into uncovered New York City manhole

    A fatal accident on Manhattan’s iconic Fifth Avenue has shaken New York City this week, after a 56-year-old woman fell 10 feet (three meters) into an unmarked, open maintenance hole and later succumbed to her injuries. The New York Police Department confirmed that first responders were dispatched to the scene shortly before midnight on Monday, following an emergency call from witnesses. When officers arrived, they found the victim, identified by family to national media as Donike Gocaj, a resident of Briarcliff Manor, New York, unconscious and non-responsive at the bottom of the open manhole.

    Gocaj was quickly transported to a nearby hospital for emergency care, but medical staff were unable to save her, and she was pronounced dead shortly after arrival. Local utility giant Con Edison, which oversees maintenance work on many of the city’s utility access holes, has opened an internal probe to determine why the structure was left uncovered and unprotected. In an official statement given to media partner CBS, the company expressed profound regret over the tragedy. “We are deeply saddened to confirm that a member of the public has died after falling into an open manhole,” the statement read. “We are actively investigating how this occurred. Our thoughts are with the individual’s family, and safety remains our top priority.” The BBC has reached out to Con Edison for additional updates on the ongoing investigation, as of Tuesday.

    Grieving family members spoke to reporters at the accident site Tuesday, saying they are still struggling to comprehend how the preventable tragedy could happen. Gocaj’s daughter-in-law, speaking through visible emotion, told reporters that no safety cones, warning signage, or physical barriers had been placed around the open hole to alert pedestrians of the hazard.

    NYPD officials confirmed that the investigation remains active, though investigators have not found any evidence of criminal involvement in the incident. The city’s medical examiner’s office will conduct an autopsy to formally confirm the exact cause of Gocaj’s death.

    Fatal falls into open manholes are not an unprecedented risk in New York City, where aging public infrastructure spans hundreds of square miles. According to the official website of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection, the agency manages the entire municipal water and wastewater network, which includes more than thousands of miles of sewer lines and roughly 100,000 active manholes across the five boroughs. The New York Times reports that as of mid-2026, the department has already received more than 700 formal service requests related to unsecured, open manholes just this year, highlighting the persistent scope of the public safety issue.

  • Israeli police establish special department to monitor foreign journalists

    Israeli police establish special department to monitor foreign journalists

    A secret specialized unit within the Israeli police force has been uncovered monitoring foreign journalists seeking entry to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories, new reporting from Israeli outlet Haaretz has revealed. The surveillance unit operates in close coordination with Israel’s Population and Immigration Authority, with personnel posted at international border crossings and the Allenby Bridge Crossing, the primary entry point from Jordan into the occupied West Bank.

    Haaretz obtained internal police documents detailing the surveillance of Italian freelance journalist Alessandro Stefanelli, who has made multiple trips to Israel and the West Bank over his career. Israeli authorities labeled Stefanelli as critical of the Israeli state, describing him in official records as a reporter and photographer who produces “one-sided coverage of Israel”.

    In July of last year, Stefanelli received formal notice that his Israeli visa had been revoked, with the Israeli embassy in Rome offering no explanation for the sudden cancellation. When the journalist attempted to enter the West Bank via the Allenby Bridge Crossing several months later, he was turned away by immigration officials.

    Stefanelli later filed a court petition challenging the entry ban, prompting Israeli police to add additional damning accusations to their file against him. The police report claims Stefanelli “calls for international intervention against ‘settler violence’ and draws a one-sided map” of the region, and further alleged he maintains “in contact with militants”.

    For Stefanelli, the unsubstantiated claims are deeply alarming. Speaking to Haaretz, he called the accusations “ridiculous in the extreme”, noting they place him on official watchlists alongside suspected terrorists. “I have trouble understanding how a police officer in a democracy can write such things,” Stefanelli said, adding that such documents are only prepared under the assumption that sitting judges will accept their unvetted claims at face value.

    His attorney, Tamir Blank, has condemned the surveillance program as a direct attack on press freedom. “It’s astonishing and disappointing that the police… are investing resources into monitoring journalistic articles and restricting freedom of expression,” Blank told Haaretz, warning the unit is barely distinguishable from authoritarian “thought police” that target dissenting opinion.

    Israeli police have defended the program, telling Haaretz all operations comply with existing domestic legislation that grants authorities the power to bar foreign nationals from entering the country if the individual or their affiliated organization is found to act against Israeli state interests.

    The surveillance of Stefanelli is part of a broader, escalating crackdown on press freedom across Israel and the Palestinian territories that has accelerated sharply since October 2023. Since that date, Israel has banned all independent journalist entry to the occupied Gaza Strip, requiring all reporters to enter under mandatory Israeli military escort. Just last month, Israel’s Supreme Court delayed its ruling on whether to lift the entry ban for the 11th time, after failing to receive any formal response from the Israeli government on the issue.

    Three major press freedom and journalist organizations – the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Reporters Without Borders (RSF), and the Foreign Press Association in Israel (FPA) – have joined a longstanding court petition demanding the ruling go forward and unimpeded access be granted to Gaza. Despite the advocacy, Supreme Court deputy president Noam Sohlberg rejected the request for an immediate ruling and granted the state another extension to prepare its response.

    Foreign journalists working within Israel already operate under severe restrictions, with the Israeli government moving to ban prominent international news outlet Al Jazeera on unproven claims it poses a threat to national security. In Gaza, the situation is far deadlier, the CPJ says: Israel is carrying out “the deadliest and most deliberate effort to kill and silence journalists” in modern history.

    The group’s statement confirms that Palestinian reporters are routinely targeted for their work: “Palestinian journalists are being threatened, directly targeted, and murdered by Israeli forces, and are arbitrarily detained and tortured in retaliation for their work.” Official CPJ data puts the death toll of journalists at 263 killed by Israeli forces since October 2023, with an additional 174 injured and 107 detained in Israeli prisons.

  • ‘They feel panicked’ – Community reacts to San Diego mosque shooting

    ‘They feel panicked’ – Community reacts to San Diego mosque shooting

    A horrific act of violence has shaken the tight-knit community of San Diego, after law enforcement confirmed that a deadly shooting at a local Islamic center left five people dead on Monday. Authorities have released initial details confirming that two teenage suspects carried out the fatal attack, which claimed the lives of three men who were inside the center at the time. Following the shooting, the two teenagers took their own lives at the scene, leaving investigators with few immediate answers about what motivated the attack.

    The violence has sparked immediate fear and anguish across the local community, with residents and community leaders expressing deep alarm over the targeted attack on a place of worship. “They feel panicked,” one community organizer shared, describing the widespread anxiety that has spread through local Muslim neighborhoods in the wake of the tragedy. Local religious leaders across all faiths have already begun reaching out to offer support, while community gatherings are being planned to honor the victims and stand in solidarity with the affected Islamic congregation.

    Law enforcement agencies have launched a full investigation into the shooting, working to piece together the backgrounds of the two teenagers and determine whether the attack was premeditated or motivated by religious hatred. Local officials have also increased patrols around places of worship across San Diego in response to the violence, in an effort to reassure communities and prevent further acts of aggression. As the investigation continues, the community remains on edge, grappling with the shock of an unprecedented attack that has stolen three innocent lives and left a lasting wound on the city.

  • Viva Las Vegas: Teams locked in for showpiece event at Allegiant Stadium as fans look to snap up tickets for epic triple-header

    Viva Las Vegas: Teams locked in for showpiece event at Allegiant Stadium as fans look to snap up tickets for epic triple-header

    Rugby league fans around the world can now lock in their travel plans for Sin City, after the National Rugby League officially announced the four competing clubs for its 2027 blockbuster annual triple-header at Las Vegas’ iconic Allegiant Stadium.

    The 2027 installment of the NRL’s groundbreaking U.S. venture will feature the Melbourne Storm, Wests Tigers, Parramatta Eels and Gold Coast Titans, marking the fourth consecutive year the league has brought elite rugby league to Las Vegas since the event launched in 2024. The only current NRL club yet to secure a spot in the showcase is the Dolphins, though the expansion side will not be left waiting long: league officials have already virtually guaranteed the club a berth in the 2028 event, which falls on the final year of the NRL’s existing partnership agreement with Las Vegas Tourism.

    On match day, which is scheduled for Sunday, February 28 AEDT, the Melbourne Storm will square off against Wests Tigers, while the Eels will go head-to-head with the Gold Coast Titans. To round out the triple-header, two English Super League sides – the Bradford Bulls and Leigh Leopards – will also take the field, bringing their own passionate fan bases to add to the electric atmosphere of the entertainment capital.

    The NRL’s high-stakes bet on Las Vegas has paid off dramatically in the years since its launch, quickly growing into one of the most anticipated marquee dates on the NRL calendar, and a bucket-list experience for die-hard fans across the globe. Official travel packages for the 2027 event are set to go on sale starting Wednesday morning, with additional details about full match scheduling to be released at a later date.

    Club executives have already expressed overwhelming excitement for the global showcase. Parramatta Eels chief executive Jim Sarantinos noted that thousands of the club’s 37,000-plus members have already signaled interest in attending the event. “We’re expecting a huge blue and gold contingent in Vegas,” Sarantinos said. To welcome traveling fans, the club will host an exclusive Eels fan hub on the Las Vegas Strip, designed as a gathering space where supporters can connect and build memories throughout the week of the event.

    The Storm-Tigers clash is already pegged as the weekend’s headline matchup, as all eyes will turn to Tigers star playmaker Jarome Luai, who will kick off his final NRL season before departing to join the Super Rugby Pacific side the Chiefs in 2028. The game will also put Melbourne Storm’s legendary undefeated round-one record under head coach Craig Bellamy to the test. For the Titans, the 2027 Vegas trip doubles as a celebration of the club’s 20th anniversary, with new head coach Josh Hannay looking to build on the team’s strong 2025 form on a global stage.

    Titans chief executive Steve Mitchell called the opportunity a landmark moment for the Gold Coast club. “This kickstarts our 20-year celebrations on one of the biggest stages in the world,” Mitchell said, noting the natural synergy between the Gold Coast – a leading international tourist destination led by Mayor Tom Tate – and Las Vegas, the U.S.’s own iconic entertainment capital. Mitchell also praised the NRL’s global expansion strategy, highlighting the Vegas event as a foundational tool for growing the league’s audience and footprint in international markets. “We know there will be tremendous interest from our entire community to travel across and be part of the occasion, and we can’t wait to see Gold Coast Titans colours in Vegas in 2027,” he added.

  • Google to release first smart glasses since Google Glass flop

    Google to release first smart glasses since Google Glass flop

    More than ten years after its high-profile first attempt at wearable smart eyewear ended in public backlash and commercial failure, Google is making a second push into the emerging smart glasses space, with a new AI-integrated model slated to hit the market in autumn this year.

    The tech giant first unveiled the new device during its annual I/O developer conference held on Tuesday in Mountain View, California. The upcoming launch will feature two distinct style variants, one co-designed by popular direct-to-consumer eyewear brand Warby Parker and the other by Seoul-based fashion eyewear label Gentle Monster.

    Google’s original 2013 Google Glass product was pulled from the market in 2015, just seven months after its UK rollout, crippled by widespread criticism over its steep price point and sweeping privacy risks. For its second iteration, Google is leaning heavily on integration with its flagship large language model, Gemini, to deliver a hands-free, heads-up user experience. The new glasses come equipped with a compact camera built into the front frame and small speakers embedded in the arms, and are compatible with both Android and Apple iOS operating systems.

    Unlike the original Google Glass, which included a head-mounted micro-display, the initial launch version will operate exclusively via private audio, delivering Gemini-powered responses directly to the wearer’s ear rather than displaying visual information on a screen. “They are designed to give you all-day help with Gemini that’s spoken into your ear privately rather than shown on a display,” explained Shahram Izadi, a senior Google executive who presented the device at the conference. Izadi confirmed that Google is already developing a follow-up version with an in-lens display capable of showing text and other visual data, but that model is not yet scheduled for public release, with additional details expected to be shared by the end of 2025. Developers are already at work building custom applications for the display-enabled variant, the company added.

    Google’s new entry mirrors the product architecture of rival Meta’s existing AI smart glasses line, which also pairs a small camera and speakers to enable voice interaction with Meta’s in-house AI assistant. Meta’s Ray-Ban co-branded smart glasses have already hit a major sales milestone of seven million units sold, according to company data, but the product has reignited the same privacy concerns that doomed Google’s first attempt: multiple reports have emerged of unknowing members of the public being recorded in public and private spaces by glasses wearers, with footage later uploaded to public online platforms without consent.

    Google is far from the only major tech player racing to capture a share of the growing smart eyewear market. Snap, the parent company of Snapchat, is preparing to launch an updated version of its own smart glasses line this year, and Apple is widely reported to be developing its mixed-reality glasses product as the next major expansion of its wearable device ecosystem.

    Industry observers have largely framed Google’s return to the space as a positive step for the emerging category. Christine Tsai, an investor at early-stage venture capital firm 500 Global, who attended this week’s developer conference, noted that mainstream adoption of smart glasses is widely seen as the next major computing shift following the rise of the smartphone. “It’s good for consumers. And it’s good for early stage start ups, where we tend to invest, because they’re a platform where people can build more capabilities,” Tsai said.

    Independent developers also see clear opportunities to leverage Google’s existing ecosystem of services. Anil Shah, founder of startup tixfix.ai which builds event management tools, says the form factor holds huge promise for integrating existing Google tools from Maps to Voice into a seamless, hands-free experience. For his own business, Shah is already considering building a dedicated integration that would let users find nearby events directly via voice commands to the glasses, without needing to open a smartphone app. “I think being able to just talk with the smart glasses without opening the app would be a very nice integration,” he said.

  • Israeli army reports rise in sexual harassment complaints

    Israeli army reports rise in sexual harassment complaints

    Newly released data from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) confirms a notable increase in reports of sexual harassment and assault within its ranks over the 2025 calendar year, Israeli media outlets confirmed this Tuesday. The data, published by the Gender Affairs Advisor unit to the IDF Chief of Staff, records 2,420 formal complaints of sexual violence filed by service members in 2025, an increase of roughly 350 complaints compared to the year prior. Further breakdown of the figures, released by the unit that oversees female soldier welfare, shows that only 42 complaints have resulted in formal criminal indictments, while another 21 cases were resolved through internal military disciplinary measures. In more than 700 of the reported incidents, the IDF’s response was limited to what the institution labels “command-level discussions,” in which accused perpetrators receive only formal warnings or reprimands. Meirav Ben Ari, an opposition lawmaker from the centrist Yesh Atid party who called for a special hearing on the issue before the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, described the newly published statistics as deeply alarming. Ben Ari stressed that the IDF is obligated to deploy every available resource to curb the prevalence of sexual violence within the ranks, prevent incidents wherever possible, and provide consistent, long-term support to survivors throughout their military service. IDF officials have pushed back on framing the rising complaint numbers as a sign of growing crisis, arguing instead that the steady upward trend in reports over the last decade reflects increasing trust among soldiers in the military’s reporting systems, and a growing willingness of survivors to come forward with their experiences. The military reiterated its long-stated policy of “zero tolerance” for all forms of abuse, and added that it remains committed to building and maintaining a safe service environment for all personnel. A safe environment, the IDF noted, is a foundational requirement for operational effectiveness, trust between command and troops, and the overall resilience of the fighting force. This release of official complaint data comes just one week after a high-ranking IDF officer was suspended from duty over allegations that he sexually assaulted a female soldier under his command, Israeli national newspaper Israel Hayom first reported. The outlet further confirmed that complaints of sexual violence within the military have risen steadily since October 2023, when the Gaza war began. Experts and officials cited by the paper link the increase to two key factors: growing public and institutional awareness of sexual harassment in the armed forces, and a dramatic surge in total troop numbers following the mass mobilization of hundreds of thousands of reserve soldiers after the outbreak of hostilities. The rising trend of sexual violence is not limited to the IDF, however. Data collected by the Association of Rape Crisis Centres in Israel, a leading non-governmental organization working to combat sexual violence across the country, shows that incidents have been increasing across Israeli society for years. The organization recorded more than 16,000 requests for help in 2024, over 85 percent of which came from women. In 2023, the group’s crisis centers received more than 17,000 calls for support, marking a 26 percent jump compared to call volumes in 2018. While the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, the parliamentary body tasked with overseeing military activity, held a formal debate on rising sexual violence within the IDF’s ranks last week, the committee did not address a separate set of explosive allegations: widespread claims of systemic sexual abuse against Palestinian detainees held by Israeli soldiers and security forces, which have been documented by multiple international and independent outlets. One week prior to the committee hearing, The New York Times published an in-depth investigation detailing what it described as systematic sexual abuse of Palestinian detainees by Israeli security forces that began after October 2023. The publication sparked immediate outrage from Israeli officials, who have pushed back aggressively against the findings. Israel’s Foreign Ministry confirmed that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar have instructed government legal teams to file a defamation lawsuit against the American newspaper. Allegations of sexual violence against Palestinian people held in Israeli detention facilities since the start of the Gaza war have been widely verified and documented by multiple human rights organizations and independent media outlets, including the London-based Middle East Eye. In December 2024, two Palestinian detainees spoke to Middle East Eye on the record, describing being raped while held in Israeli detention. One detainee reported being raped by a military dog, while a second recounted that Israeli officers raped him with sharp objects while he was held blindfolded. A United Nations independent inquiry published last year went further, formally accusing Israel of using sexualized torture and rape as an official method of war, employed to destabilize, dominate, oppress, and destroy the Palestinian people.

  • Arsenal win Premier League after Man City held by Bournemouth

    Arsenal win Premier League after Man City held by Bournemouth

    After more than two decades of near misses and unfulfilled promise, Arsenal have finally reclaimed the English Premier League crown, their first top-flight title since 2002. The historic milestone was sealed not on the Gunners’ own pitch, but on the south coast of England, where Bournemouth held treble-chasing Manchester City to a dramatic 1-1 draw that mathematically ended Pep Guardiola’s side’s bid to retain the league crown.

    The result means Mikel Arteta’s young Arsenal side cannot be caught at the top of the table with one match still remaining, bringing a close to a six-year trophy drought for the north London club. The Gunners had edged one step closer to the title 24 hours earlier, grinding out a narrow 1-0 victory over already-relegated Burnley that stretched their lead over City to five points. Having led the table for the vast majority of the 2024-25 campaign, Arteta’s men showed impressive mental resilience to bounce back from a costly defeat to City last month, reeling off four consecutive clean sheet victories to cruise over the finish line.

    For City and Guardiola, the draw marks an underwhelming end to what was already a historic season. Just 48 hours before Bournemouth hosted City, Guardiola’s side had secured a domestic FA Cup and League Cup double, beating Chelsea in the FA Cup final at Wembley to bring the Catalan manager’s trophy haul at the club to 20 major honors. But the final week of the season has been overshadowed by widespread reports that Guardiola will depart the Etihad Stadium at the end of his 10-year reign this weekend, ending the most successful managerial spell in the club’s modern history.

    Guardiola had pre-emptively warned that fatigue and Bournemouth’s own high motivation would make the clash a major challenge. The Cherries came into the match on a 16-game unbeaten run, and already guaranteed their first ever spot in European football, with a potential Champions League place still on the table if results go their way on the final matchday.

    The match played out exactly as the City boss feared: his side produced a flat, lifeless first half, with their only clear goal chalked off for offside. Bournemouth broke the deadlock in the 39th minute, when teenage forward Eli Junior Kroupi curled a sensational strike into the top corner, his 13th goal of the campaign – a new record for a teenager in their debut Premier League season.

    City came closest to an equalizer just moments into the second half, but Nico O’Reilly’s close-range effort was saved by Cherries goalkeeper Djordje Petrovic, leaving Guardiola watching pensively as his side’s title bid faded. Travelling City fans, desperate to convince Guardiola to reverse his decision to leave and extend his contract another year, chanted “One more year” early in the match, but their side could not find the spark needed to deliver the farewell win they craved.

    Bournemouth twice hit the woodwork in the second half, and could have sealed all three points long before the final whistle. Erling Haaland finally found the net for City deep into stoppage time, but the equalizer came far too late to save their title challenge. The draw means Guardiola will finish his final season without a league title, the first time he has gone two consecutive campaigns without winning the top flight in his entire managerial career.

    While the result ends City’s title hopes, it also has major ripple effects across the European qualification race. The point for Bournemouth cements their place in the Europa League next season at minimum, but moves Liverpool into a strong position to claim the final Champions League spot: the Merseyside club now hold a three-point lead and a six-goal advantage over the Cherries heading into the final matchday.