Georgina Rodriguez, kids support Ronaldo

Rodriguez took to Instagram to share a series of images of herself and her family. (Instagram)
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Updated 25 October 2023
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Georgina Rodriguez, kids support Ronaldo

DUBAI: Argentine model Georgina Rodriguez this week attended her partner Cristiano Ronaldo’s match with Al-Nassr in Riyadh. 

Al-Nassr played against Al-Duhail in the Asian Champions League and won 4-3.  

 

 

Rodriguez took to Instagram to share a series of images of herself and her family. The first two images were of herself standing in the field.  

The reality TV star wore Ronaldo’s yellow Al-Nassr jerseys which she paired with skinny jeans, high-heeled boots and a blue bag. Her hair was in a slicked back braided pony tail.   

She also shared a picture of the football player’s first son, Cristiano Ronaldo Jr, and her children with Ronaldo, Mateo, Eva and Alana Martina as they watched their father play.  

“We won,” she captioned her post.


Director Kaouther Ben Hania rejects Berlin honor over Gaza

Updated 20 February 2026
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Director Kaouther Ben Hania rejects Berlin honor over Gaza

DUBAI: Kaouther Ben Hania, the Tunisian filmmaker behind “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” refused to accept an award at a Berlin ceremony this week after an Israeli general was recognized at the same event.

The director was due to receive the Most Valuable Film award at the Cinema for Peace gala, held alongside the Berlinale, but chose to leave the prize behind.

On stage, Ben Hania said the moment carried a sense of responsibility rather than celebration. She used her remarks to demand justice and accountability for Hind Rajab, a five-year-old Palestinian girl killed by Israeli soldiers in Gaza in 2024, along with two paramedics who were shot while trying to reach her.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by @artists4ceasefire

“Justice means accountability. Without accountability, there is no peace,” Ben Hania said.

“The Israeli army killed Hind Rajab; killed her family; killed the two paramedics who came to save her, with the complicity of the world’s most powerful governments and institutions,” she said.

“I refuse to let their deaths become a backdrop for a polite speech about peace. Not while the structures that enabled them remain untouched.”

Ben Hania said she would accept the honor “with joy” only when peace is treated as a legal and moral duty, grounded in accountability for genocide.