Fast Company to launch MENA website this month

Photo/Supplied
Short Url
Updated 11 March 2022
Follow

Fast Company to launch MENA website this month

  • Print edition launching May 2022

DUBAI: Fast Company magazine will launch a website for the Middle East and North Africa region this month, with a print edition scheduled for May.

The brand announced last year that it had signed a new foreign licensee, Vibe Projects, for the MENA region.

As part of the regional foray, Fast Company will also launch lists and awards, such as Most Creative People in Business, later in the year. The people featured in the list will be honored at a gala awards night.

Ravi Raman, publisher of Fast Company, told Arab News: “Fast Company’s arrival to the Middle East reinforces the role of technology and innovation in a changing world.”

The print edition will be released on a quarterly basis and will coincide with “key experiential events” like Most Creative People in Business and Most Innovative Companies and World Changing Ideas, said Raman.

Fast Company Middle East’s first office is in the UAE. It plans to open bureaus in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Egypt, in addition to appointing correspondents and reporters to cover stories from countries including Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco and Yemen, Raman added.

The website can be accessed free of charge for an initial period of six months, after which Fast Company will introduce a metered subscription — a pricing model where readers are charged based on their consumption. A certain amount of articles will remain free every month.

“During the launch phase, readers would get full access only after registering,” said Raman, adding that the focus of Fast Company is to acquire “first-party data for a deeper understanding of our consumer behavior.”

The print edition will be available via several subscription options, including “digital+,” corporate subscriptions and auto-add when applying for any of Fast Company’s lists.

“For example, when a company files a nomination for any of our lists, they would be presented the option of adding a print subscription,” Raman said.

The print editions cannot be purchased in stores, since “we want to make sure returns and unsold copies are minimized,” he added.

Fast Company is set to an announce an editor-in-chief for the region.

Raman said: “The region is being propelled by powerful societal shifts, and we aim to become a clarion call heralding a new era of business for a new generation of business leaders.”


Tunisian journalist Chatha BelHajj Mubarak freed after sentence cut

Updated 14 January 2026
Follow

Tunisian journalist Chatha BelHajj Mubarak freed after sentence cut

  • The court cut her sentence from five years to two, ‌making her eligible for ‌immediate release, ‌her ⁠brother ​told ‌Reuters

TUNIS: A Tunisian appeal court on Wednesday ordered the release of journalist Chatha ​BelHajj Mubarak, jailed since 2023 in a conspiracy case, after reducing her prison sentence, her family said.
The court cut her sentence from five years to two, ‌making her eligible for ‌immediate release, ‌her ⁠brother ​told ‌Reuters.
She was convicted in the so-called “Instalingo” case, which involved politicians, media figures and other defendants accused of conspiracy and financial crimes. BelHajj Mubarak denied the charges.
“Chatha ⁠is free and leaving prison,” ‌her brother, Amen BelHajj Mubarak, ‍said.
He said ‍her health had severely ‍deteriorated during her time in prison. She suffered serious complications, including significant hearing loss, and was diagnosed ​with cancer in detention, he added.
Tunisian authorities have said the ⁠case stems from judicial investigations into alleged financial and security-related offenses, and have rejected accusations by opposition groups that the prosecutions were politically motivated.
Tunisian prosecutors are pursuing a number of high-profile conspiracy cases involving politicians, journalists and activists. Several opposition ‌leaders have received lengthy prison terms.