Will Smith congratulates Dubai’s Sheikh Hamdan on twin babies

Sheikh Hamdan shared a picture on his Instagram Stories of two large gift boxes he received from Will Smith. (Instagram)
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Updated 28 May 2021
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Will Smith congratulates Dubai’s Sheikh Hamdan on twin babies

DUBAI: American actor Will Smith has congratulated Dubai’s Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed on the birth of his twins.

The UAE royal announced his joy at the births by sharing a picture of himself holding the newborns on May 21.

On Friday, Sheikh Hamdan shared a picture on his Instagram Stories of two large gift boxes he received from Smith, a blue one tagged “Prince Rashid,” and a pink one tagged “Princess Sheikha.”




Instagram/ @faz3

“Thank you,” wrote the Crown Prince.

In another picture, the actor posed alongside his gifts, hinting that the star might currently be in the UAE.

Smith has previously been spotted in the UAE multiple times.




Instagram/ @faz3

In 2016, during a trip to promote his superhero flick “Suicide Squad,” Smith revealed that Dubai was one of his favorite cities in the world.

“I feel like Dubai dreams the way I dream,” he said.

“When I landed, I was like, that’s how I would build the city if I were building a city. The emirate really flows with who I am,” Smith has previously shared. “I love the energy of progress here. It’s the way the people and the royal family, how they have the design and the ideas. Everything wants to be the best and I love that energy.”


Writers boycott Adelaide Festival after Randa Abdel-Fattah is dropped

Updated 09 January 2026
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Writers boycott Adelaide Festival after Randa Abdel-Fattah is dropped

DUBAI: A wave of writers have withdrawn from the Adelaide Festival’s Writers’ Week, prompting organizers to take down a section of the event’s website as the backlash continues over the removal of Palestinian Australian author Randa Abdel-Fattah from the 2026 program.

The festival confirmed on Friday that it had temporarily removed the online schedule listing authors, journalists, academics and commentators after participants began pulling out in protest of the board’s decision, which cited “cultural sensitivity” concerns following the Bondi terror attack.

In a statement posted online, the festival said the listings had been unpublished while changes were made to reflect the growing number of withdrawals.

By Friday afternoon, 47 speakers had already exited the program, with more believed to be coordinating their departures with fellow writers.

High-profile figures stepping away include Helen Garner, Chloe Hooper, Sarah Krasnostein, Miles Franklin Prize winner Michelle de Kretser, Drusilla Modjeska, Melissa Lucashenko and Stella Prize-winning poet Evelyn Araluen.

Best-selling novelist Trent Dalton also withdrew from the event. He had been scheduled to deliver a paid keynote at Adelaide Town Hall, one of the few Writers’ Week sessions requiring a ticket.