Major US news organizations urge Biden to evacuate Afghan journalists

Publishers of the three newspapers drafted a joint letter addressed to Biden, requesting support for their colleagues. (File/Reuters)
Short Url
Updated 17 August 2021
Follow

Major US news organizations urge Biden to evacuate Afghan journalists

  • Three major US news organizations urge US President Joe Biden to evacuate Afghan journalists
  • The appeals follow the footsteps of other US and UK media organizations who also urged their respective governments to evacuate their Afghan colleagues

LONDON: Three major US news organizations, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Washington Street Journal, urged US President Joe Biden on Monday to evacuate Afghan journalists.

The papers pleaded with the White House to facilitate the safety of over 200 journalists and local staff affiliated with them, currently “in danger” at Kabul airport.

Publishers of the three newspapers drafted a joint letter addressed to Biden, requesting “support for our colleagues and … an unequivocal signal that the government will stand behind the free press.

“For the past 20 years, brave Afghan colleagues have worked tirelessly to help The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal share news and information from the region with the global public. Now those colleagues and their families are trapped in Kabul, their lives in peril,” the joint letter said. 

The Post also reportedly plans to help its local employees and their families apply for US visas from third countries. 

On Sunday, major German newspapers and media organizations also urged Chancellor Angela Merkel to evacuate Afghan journalists from the country, as the Taliban entered Kabul.  

The appeals follow the footsteps of other US and UK media organizations who also urged their respective governments to evacuate their Afghan colleagues from Afghanistan. 

The repeated appeals prompted the US State Department to issue a decision to include Afghan journalists in their Refugee Admissions Program. 

Afghan journalists, translators, interpreters and fixers have been providing invaluable information from the ground to international media organizations since the 2001 US-led invasion. 


Tunisian filmmaker wins $1 million global AI film contest

Updated 51 min 3 sec ago
Follow

Tunisian filmmaker wins $1 million global AI film contest

  • The French-language short film, “Lily,” was created entirely using Google’s generative AI tools
  • The winning film was selected from 3,500 film submissions

DUBAI: Tunisian filmmaker Zoubeir Jlassi on Saturday won the inaugural $1 million AI film award, launched in collaboration with Google’s Gemini, for his short movie, “Lily.”

He was declared the winner in a ceremony held during the second day of the 1 Billion Followers Summit in Dubai where Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, chairperson of the Dubai Culture and Arts Authority, presented the award.

The French-language short film, “Lily,” created entirely using Google’s generative AI tools — including Gemini, Veo, Imagen and Flow — was named after the filmmaker’s daughter, who inspired the story.

The nine-minute film follows a lonely archivist haunted by a doll caught on his car bumper during a hit-and-run accident, forcing him to confront his guilt, confess to the police, and reunite the doll with the injured child in the hospital.

AI-generated behind the scenes shots of the winning film Lily. (Instagram: @zoubeirjlassi)

“With this film, I hope to inspire aspiring filmmakers to dream, take ideas from their archives, execute them and share them online without relying on large production budgets or expensive equipment,” Jlassi told Arab News.

“This is the beauty of technology; it unleashes creativity without limits.”

He said that the film aimed to convey that objects can serve as silent witnesses to human actions, bearing the truth and calling for moral accountability.

The winning film was selected from 3,500 film submissions from 16 countries, with organizers saying the award aimed to encourage the use of AI in producing meaningful films and enhance the creators’ ability to deliver humanitarian stories.

It also looked to empower young people to leverage technology in boosting their creativity and creating artworks that bridge cultures.

AI-generated behind the scenes shots of the winning film Lily. (Instagram: @zoubeirjlassi)

The shortlisting process took place over multiple stages. A jury of international technology experts and filmmakers selected 12 films based on the storytelling originality, narrative structure, visual aesthetics, creative use of AI technologies, overall creativity, emotional impact, and adherence to transparency and ethical principles.

The five finalists were selected after public voting of the works selected by the jury, organizers said.

Each film had to be powered by at least 70 percent generative AI tools from Google — including Veo, Imagen and Flow — or third-party platforms that run on Gemini’s technology. The tech company said that the entries underwent advanced technical assessment and AI verification to ensure submissions met the criteria.

The remaining finalists were “Portrait No. 72” by Rodson Verr Suarez of the Philippines; “Cats Like Warmth” by South Korean director Lee Su Yeol; “Heal” by Egyptian director Mohamed Gomaa; and “The Translator” by US-based Pylyp Li.

The top five AI-generated short films were screened on the first day of the 1 Billion Followers Summit, a gathering of content creators aiming to explore how new media can drive positive change and fuel sustainable economic growth.