Arabs will not be led by Ankara or Tehran: UAE diplomat

Minister of State for Foreign Affairs for the United Arab Emirates, Anwar Gargash
Updated 27 December 2017
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Arabs will not be led by Ankara or Tehran: UAE diplomat

DUBAI: A senior UAE diplomat said on Wednesday the Arab world would not be led by Turkey, the Gulf state’s first comment on Ankara since a quarrel broke out last week over a retweet by the Emirati foreign minister that President Tayyip Erdogan called an insult.
UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said there was a need for Arab countries to rally around the “Arab axis” of Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
“The sectarian and partisan view is not an acceptable alternative, and the Arab world will not be led by Tehran or Ankara,” he wrote on his official Twitter page.
Last week, Turkey summoned the charge d’affaires at the UAE Embassy in Ankara, after UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan shared a tweet that accused Turkish troops of looting the holy city of Madinah a century ago.


Internet blackout leaves anxious Iranians in the dark

Updated 8 sec ago
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Internet blackout leaves anxious Iranians in the dark

PARIS: Iran’s internet is still “around 1 percent of ordinary levels,” monitor Netblocks said on Thursday, leaving most Iranians struggling to access independent news or communicate with the outside world.
Iranian authorities shut off internet access on Saturday after Israel and the US began air strikes, plunging the country into an information blackout.
“Iran’s internet blackout has now exceeded 120 hours with connectivity still flatlining around 1 percent of ordinary levels,” internet monitor Netblocks said in a message posted on social media platform X on Thursday.
Some Iranians are finding brief moments of the day when they are able to connect and send messages, while others have resorted to using illegal Starlink subscriptions. Calls to Iran from overseas to mobile phones or landlines are near-impossible.
“The internet speed is very slow,” a Tehran resident said by message, asking to remain anonymous for security reasons. “You can’t call and voice messages don’t get delivered. We can just text.”
Netblocks said that Iranian telecoms companies were now sending messages to “threaten users who try to connect to the global internet with legal action.”
“The internet situation here is abysmal,” a resident in Bukan in western Iran, said in a message. “It connects and disconnects. The connection is slow, so the VPNs don’t work.”
In normal circumstances, Iranians use VPNs to connect to Western internet services such as Instagram that are banned in Iran. 
Others with working internet connections are helping out others.
Shima, a 33-year-old in Tehran, said that she was helping friends by sending news of life in the capital, which has been hit by waves of missile and bombing strikes since Saturday.
“I need to call a lot of people, even strangers, on behalf of their families,” she said.