Muslim woman in UK receives death threats for twerking in hijab

The young Muslim was filmed on a busy street in Birmingham. (Photo courtesy: Facebook.com)
Updated 08 March 2017
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Muslim woman in UK receives death threats for twerking in hijab

A young Muslim woman in the UK has received death threats online this week after she was filmed twerking in public while wearing a hijab.

She was filmed on a busy street in Birmingham and can be seen dancing in a provocative manner with a street performer in front of a crowd.

The clip was posted on social media, while onlookers can be heard gasping, and has gone viral.

The video sparked an online tirade, with many comments using explicit language and calling for her to be killed.

One Facebook user wrote: “Truly disgusting. Some people don’t understand the meaning of the veil. You can dress in a nun outfit and dance like a w***e in public. Defeats the whole purpose, doesn’t it?”

Meanwhile, others came to her defense, saying: “Everyone makes mistakes and she shouldn’t be held for it.”

The identity of the young woman has not been revealed and it unclear how old she is.


Oracle says data center outage causing issues faced by US TikTok users

Updated 28 January 2026
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Oracle says data center outage causing issues faced by US TikTok users

WASHINGTON: Oracle on Tuesday said issues faced by US users of social media ​app TikTok are the result of a temporary weather-related power outage at an Oracle data center, after California Governor Gavin Newsom linked the issues to what he called the suppression of content critical of President Donald Trump.
“Over the weekend, an Oracle data center experienced a temporary weather-related power outage which impacted TikTok,” Oracle spokesperson Michael Egbert said in an email.
A powerful winter storm struck much of the US ‌over the weekend.
“The challenges ‌US TikTok users may be experiencing ‌are the ⁠result ​of technical ‌issues that followed the power outage, which Oracle and TikTok are working to quickly resolve,” Egbert said.
On Monday, Newsom said his office was launching a review to determine if TikTok’s content moderation practices violated state law.
“Following TikTok’s sale to a Trump-aligned business group, our office has received reports — and independently confirmed instances — of suppressed content critical of President Trump,” Newsom’s office had ⁠said.
TikTok’s Chinese owner, ByteDance, last week finalized a deal to set up a majority US-owned ‌joint venture known as TikTok USDS Joint Venture ‍LLC that will secure US ‍data, to avert a ban on the short video app used ‍by more than 200 million Americans. The deal was praised by Trump.
The joint venture has denied censorship, saying “it would be inaccurate to report that this  is anything but the technical issues we’ve transparently confirmed.”
Each of ​the joint venture’s three managing investors — cloud computing giant Oracle, private equity group Silver Lake and Abu Dhabi-based investment firm ⁠MGX — will hold a stake of 15 percent. The deal provides for American and global investors to hold 80.1 percent of the venture while ByteDance will own 19.9 percent.
The joint venture said on Tuesday it “made significant progress in recovering our US infrastructure with our US data center partner” but noted that US users may still face some technical issues, including when posting new content.
With more than 16 million followers on his personal TikTok account, Trump credited the app with helping him win the 2024 election.
Last week’s deal was a milestone for TikTok after years of battles with the US government ‌over Washington’s concerns about risks to national security and privacy under Trump and former President Joe Biden.