Miss Palestine aims to showcase her homeland’s rich heritage and beauty

Nadeen Ayoub said she would take any opportunity to speak out for her people. (Supplied)
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Updated 13 September 2025
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Miss Palestine aims to showcase her homeland’s rich heritage and beauty

  • ’We’re more than our pain,’ says Nadeen Ayoub as she prepares for Miss Universe pageant

DUBAI: Nadeen Ayoub, the first Palestinian to compete in Miss Universe, will step onto the stage at the height of one of the most harrowing periods in her people’s history, determined to show they are more than headlines of war.
“We’re more than our struggle and pain,” she said in Dubai, where she is preparing to raise the Palestinian flag at the pageant in Thailand in November.
“Right now, our people need a voice and we don’t want our identity to be erased,” she said, nearly two years into the Israel-Hamas war that has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza.
As Israel intensifies its onslaught, causing what the UN has called a famine in Gaza City and widespread destruction in the territory, Ayoub said she wanted to showcase her homeland’s rich heritage and beauty, to humanize a people long reduced to just their suffering.
Palestinians are also “children who want to live, women who have dreams and aspirations,” said the beauty queen, her fair face framed by long dark brown hair.

Ayoub lives between Ramallah, Amman, and Dubai — where she founded an organization that trains content creators on sustainability and artificial intelligence.
She grew up in the occupied West Bank, the US, and Canada. 
After earning degrees in English literature and psychology, she went on to teach and work for NGOs in the occupied territories.
“My parents are both academics, and they always told me to focus on my university (studies),” she said.
But after modelling at a fashion show in Italy, people working in the industry encouraged her to look into competing in beauty pageants, so she launched a Miss Palestine franchise.
“Something as simple as having a (Miss Palestine) organization is difficult,” even though it is a given in other countries, she said.
Part of the difficulty is that Palestinians are divided between the occupied West Bank, besieged Gaza, and annexed East Jerusalem, while many are refugees in neighboring countries, living abroad or in Israel.
Though recognized by the vast majority of countries, some nations do not recognize a Palestinian state, making representation on a world stage an act of defiance for people like Ayoub.
“(Palestine) is a country, it is a nation, I will be representing an actual country,” Ayoub insisted.
Western frustration with Israel’s conduct in Gaza has pushed several countries, including Britain and France, to say they will recognize Palestinian statehood later this month.
But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted this week “there will be no Palestinian state,” and last month Israel approved a major West Bank settlement that the international community has warned threatens the viability of a future such state.
In 2022, the first Miss Palestine pageant was held online to allow for Palestinians scattered abroad, in Israel, and in the territories to participate.
As the first winner of the title, Ayoub has worked on the organization’s philanthropic activities and competed in Miss Earth, an environmentally minded pageant, in 2022.
But since the Gaza war erupted in October 2023, she has not participated in any beauty pageants.
Ayoub said she would take any opportunity to speak out for her people.
“We must be present on every single international stage. Every single opportunity that we have to talk about Palestine, to show Palestine, we must take it,” she said.

 


Syria, Kurdish forces race to save integration deal ahead of deadline

Updated 57 min 55 sec ago
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Syria, Kurdish forces race to save integration deal ahead of deadline

  • Discussions have accelerated in recent days despite growing frustrations over delays

AMMAN/RIYADH/BEIRUT/ANKARA: Syrian, Kurdish and US officials are scrambling ahead of a year-end deadline to show some progress in a stalled deal to merge Kurdish forces with the Syrian state, according to several people involved in or familiar with the talks.
Discussions have accelerated in recent days despite growing frustrations over delays, according to the Syrian, Kurdish and Western sources who spoke to Reuters, some of whom cautioned that a major breakthrough was unlikely.
The interim Syrian government has sent a proposal to the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) that controls the country’s northeast, according to five of the sources.
In it, Damascus expressed openness to the SDF reorganizing its roughly 50,000 fighters into three main divisions and smaller brigades as long as it cedes some chains of command and opens its territory to other Syrian army units, according to one Syrian, one ‌Western and three Kurdish ‌officials.

’SAVE FACE’ AND EXTEND TALKS ON INTEGRATION
It was unclear whether the idea would ‌move ⁠forward, ​and several sources downplayed ‌prospects of a comprehensive eleventh-hour deal, saying more talks are needed. Still, one SDF official said: “We are closer to a deal than ever before.”
A second Western official said that any announcement in coming days would be meant in part to “save face,” extend the deadline and maintain stability in a nation that remains fragile a year after the fall of former President Bashar Assad.
Whatever emerges was expected to fall short of the SDF’s full integration into the military and other state institutions by year-end, as was called for in a landmark March 10 agreement between the sides, most of the sources said.
Failure to mend Syria’s deepest remaining fracture risks an armed clash that could derail its emergence from 14 years of war, and ⁠potentially draw in neighboring Turkiye that has threatened an incursion against Kurdish fighters it views as terrorists.
Both sides have accused the other of stalling and acting in bad faith. The SDF ‌is reluctant to give up autonomy it won as the main US ally during ‍the war, after which it controlled Islamic State prisons and rich ‍oil resources.
The US, which backs Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa and has urged global support for his interim government, has relayed messages between ‍the SDF and Damascus, facilitated talks and urged a deal, several sources said.
A US State Department spokesperson said Tom Barrack, the US ambassador to Turkiye and special envoy to Syria, continued to support and facilitate dialogue between the Syrian government and the SDF, saying the aim was to maintain momentum toward integration of the forces.

SDF DOWNPLAYS DEADLINE; TURKEY SAYS PATIENCE THIN
Since a major round of talks in the summer between the sides failed to produce results, frictions ​have mounted including frequent skirmishes along several front lines across the north.
The SDF took control of much of northeast Syria, where most of the nation’s oil and wheat production is, after defeating Daesh militants in 2019.
It said ⁠it was ending decades of repression against the Kurdish minority but resentment against its rule has grown among the predominantly Arab population, including against compulsory conscription of young men.
A Syrian official said the year-end deadline for integration is firm and only “irreversible steps” by the SDF could bring an extension.
Turkiye’s foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, said on Thursday it does not want to resort to military means but warned that patience with the SDF is “running out.”
Kurdish officials have downplayed the deadline and said they are committed to talks toward a just integration.
“The most reliable guarantee for the agreement’s continued validity lies in its content, not timeframe,” said Sihanouk Dibo, a Syrian autonomous administration official, suggesting it could take until mid-2026 to address all points in the deal.
The SDF had in October floated the idea of reorganizing into three geographical divisions as well as the brigades. It is unclear whether that concession, in the proposal from Damascus in recent days, would be enough to convince it to give up territorial control.
Abdel Karim Omar, representative of the Kurdish-led northeastern administration in Damascus, said the proposal, which has not been made public, included “logistical and administrative details that could cause disagreement and ‌lead to delays.”
A senior Syrian official told Reuters the response “has flexibility to facilitate reaching an agreement that implements the March accord.”