Social media reacts to removal of artwork by Palestinian children from London hospital  

Social media users are protesting in droves after it was announced that the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London has removed Palestinian children’s art from a display, following complaints by a UK-based pro-Israel lawyer group. (AFP)
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Updated 27 February 2023
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Social media reacts to removal of artwork by Palestinian children from London hospital  

DUBAI: Social media users are protesting in droves after it was announced that a hospital in London has removed Palestinian children’s art from a display, following complaints by a UK-based pro-Israel lawyer group.  

The displayed artwork at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital was drawn by Palestinian children from Gaza and featured a number of designs, including that of an olive branch and images of Temple Mount with a Palestinian flag.  

The artwork, titled “Crossing Borders - A Festival of Plates,” was designed by schoolchildren from two United Nations Relief Work Agency (UNRWA) schools in Gaza — Beit Lahia Girls’ School and the Jabalia Prep Boys’ A School — and was displayed at the children’s outpatients department.  

The artwork was removed following a complaint by the UK Lawyers for Israel group (UKLFI). 

“Jewish patients have approached UKLFI for help, saying that they feel vulnerable, harassed and victimised by this display. UKLFI has written to Lesley Watts, the Chief Executive of the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust asking for the display to be removed,” UKLFI wrote on its website on Feb. 9.  

Although the artwork was removed in mid-February, netizens have taken to social media over the past two days to protest the move. 

“Cultural genocide: Pro-Israel lawyers complained about art by Palestinian children at a London hospital because it made Jewish patients feel uncomfortable (or guilty?). The art was removed,” commented one user on Twitter, sharing the news. 

“Totally pathetic of the UKLFI and the Chelsea and Westminster hospital for giving in. Is this really true? It’s artwork which is supposed to be unifying,” wrote another user on Twitter.  

“Not sure which is worse, the cruel heartlessness of UK Lawyers For Israel or the craven spinelessness of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital,” tweeted Fanar Haddad, an assistant professor at The University of Copenhagen.  

On Feb. 14, Caroline Turner, director of UKLFI, commented: “We are pleased that the display has been removed and that the hospital has responded positively to its patients’ complaints.”


Tunisian filmmaker wins $1 million AI Film Award

Updated 11 January 2026
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Tunisian filmmaker wins $1 million AI Film Award

DUBAI: The $1 million AI Film Award was given to Tunisian filmmaker Zoubeir Jlassi for his film “Lily” during the fourth edition of the 1 Billion Followers Summit in Dubai.

The prize was awarded by Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, chairperson of the Dubai Culture and Arts Authority.

The prize was awarded by Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, chairperson of the Dubai Culture and Arts Authority. (Supplied)

The award, organized by the summit in partnership with Google Gemini, was presented as part of the gathering that focuses on the content creation economy. The event, that ran from Jan. 9–11, brought together more than 15,000 content creators and influencers, alongside over 580 speakers and 150 CEOs under the theme “Content for Good.”

The AI Film Award received 3,500 film submissions. Entries underwent technical evaluation with Google Gemini to ensure at least 70 percent of the production used generative AI tools.

Following jury selection and public voting, “Lily” emerged as the winner from a final group of five nominees, which included “Portrait No. 72,” “Cats Like Warmth,” “HEAL,” and “The Translator.”