British writer quits union following arrest of Palestinian booksellers

Matthew Teller, British writer. (X @matthewteller)
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Updated 21 February 2025
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British writer quits union following arrest of Palestinian booksellers

  • Matthew Teller: Society of Authors statement on arrests in East Jerusalem an ‘insult’ and ‘bertrayal’
  • Author Mahmoud Muna, nephew Ahmed Muna were detained in Israeli police raid on Feb. 9

LONDON: A British writer has resigned from the Society of Authors after it released a statement following a raid by Israeli police on Palestinian-owned bookstores in East Jerusalem.

Matthew Teller said the statement, which failed to mention the names of the booksellers, Israel or Palestine, was a “betrayal” that added “insult to injury” for the individuals detained.

Two branches of the Educational Bookshop were raided on Feb. 9. Police arrested Mahmoud Muna, who co-authored the book “Daybreak in Gaza” with Teller, and his nephew Ahmed Muna.

Around 250 books were taken in the raid, but most were subsequently returned to the stores. Murad Muna, Mahmoud’s brother, said Israeli police were using Google Translate to identify “anything they didn’t like the look of,” including any book “with a Palestinian flag on it.”

A police statement said Mahmoud and Ahmed were initially charged with “inciting and supporting terrorism,” and “detectives encountered numerous books containing inciteful material with nationalist Palestinian themes, including a children’s colouring book titled ‘From the River to the Sea.’”

The pair were eventually released and placed under house arrest, with their charges downgraded to “disturbing public order,” their lawyer said.

Protesters gathered outside a court hearing for the pair on Feb. 10, which was also attended by diplomats from the UK and several other European countries.

The SoA’s statement said: “We are concerned by recent press reports on the police raid of an educational bookshop in a country which is governed by a parliamentary democracy.”

Teller said he hoped the SoA “would have taken this opportunity to illuminate the evils of state censorship and defend those who seek to practise freedom. Instead, it obscured understanding of the issues with platitudes and irrelevant assertions. It was an abject failure.

“I wholeheartedly support writers who are able to remain engaged with the SoA, and I recognise the value in urgent ongoing efforts to force change, but I, regretfully, can no longer tolerate such equivocation from a trade union that purports to represent me.”

An SoA spokesperson said it is “saddened when any of our members decide to leave us,” but “we considered that recent press reports provided an opportunity to the SoA to remind our members of its position on book bans.”

More than £30,000 ($37,925) were raised for the booksellers by a GoFundMe campaign organized by Saqi Books in London to help pay for damages, replace lost books and loss of income until Mahmoud and Ahmed are permitted by Israeli authorities to return to work.

Saqi Books is also launching #BooksellingIsNotACrime Day on Saturday in partnership with Pluto Press, with participating booksellers and organizations encouraged to donate to the fundraiser and raise the profile of Palestinian writers.

 


TikTok names 2025 MENA Awards nominees ahead of Dubai ceremony 

Updated 12 December 2025
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TikTok names 2025 MENA Awards nominees ahead of Dubai ceremony 

  • Awards celebrate 66 creators across 11 categories, spanning food, sport, education, entertainment, fashion, and beauty 
  • Ceremony will take place during the 1 Billion Followers Summit on Jan. 8 

LONDON: TikTok has announced the nominees for its 2025 MENA Awards, an annual showcase of the creators, trends and cultural moments that shaped the region’s online conversation over the past year. 

For the first time, the awards will be held in Dubai during the 1 Billion Followers Summit in January, which is one of the world’s largest gatherings of digital creators. 

“We’re proud to celebrate the return of the TikTok Awards in MENA, a moment dedicated to spotlighting the remarkable creativity emerging from our region and the creators who continue to inspire creativity and bring joy to millions every day,” Kinda Ibrahim, regional general manager of operations, TikTok Middle East, Africa, South and Central Asia, said. 

This year’s TikTok Awards MENA will highlight 66 creators across 11 categories, spanning food, sport, education, entertainment, fashion, and beauty, alongside four cross-cutting prizes: Creator of the Year, Visionary Content Award, Breakthrough Artist of the Year and Changemaker of the Year. 

TikTok said the shortlisted accounts reflect how MENA creators drove global conversations in 2025, from viral sounds and challenges to issue-based campaigns and long-form storytelling that traveled beyond the region’s borders.  

The platform said the awards are an opportunity to recognize creators whose work has helped define the platform’s mix of humor, lifestyle, music, and social commentary in Arabic and other languages. 

The ceremony will also include performances by regional artists whose tracks have underpinned major TikTok trends this year, with the full lineup due to be confirmed later in December. 

A full list of nominees is available on TikTok MENA channel. Public voting for the awards is now open and runs until Dec. 23, with winners set to be announced at the summit on Jan. 8.