This is a temporary backup site for TRENDS MENA while our primary website is being restored following a regional disruption affecting AWS cloud infrastructure in the GCC.

Search Site

AD Ports Group 2024 net profit $484m

The Group's revenue increased 48 percent year-on-year.

TAQA net income $1.93bn in 2024

The company's revenues increased 6.7 percent year-on-year.

ADNOC L&S 2024 net profit $756m

The company's revenue increased by 29 percent to $3.54 billion.

ADNOC Distribution 2024 net profit down 7%

Minus UAE corporate tax, it would have grown by 2.4% to $725m

Maaden raises $1.25bn in sukuk offering

The Sukuk were offered in a five-year and a 10-year tranche.

Al Jazeera bureau chief leaves Gaza

  • Dahdouh said he is due to travel onwards to Qatar where he will undergo surgery for a wound sustained in an Israeli strike last month
  • Khaled Elbalshy, head of the Egyptian journalists' syndicate, said the organization had spoken to Dahdouh after he left Gaza

Palestinian Territories– Al Jazeera’s Gaza bureau chief Wael al-Dahdouh left the Palestinian territory Tuesday, he told AFP, after Israeli strikes killed his wife, multiple children and a colleague.

Scenes of Dahdouh mourning his family and fleeing on foot from Gaza City have been broadcast globally over the weeks since war erupted between Hamas fighters and Israel on October 7.

Speaking to an AFP journalist in southern Gaza, the 53-year-old said he had crossed the Rafah border post with Egypt.

Dahdouh said he is due to travel onwards to Qatar where he will undergo surgery for a wound sustained in an Israeli strike last month, which killed the Qatar-based network’s cameraman Samer Abu Daqqa and several others.

His wife, two of their children and a grandson were killed in October bombardment of central Gaza’s Nuseirat refugee camp, while his eldest son was killed in strikes this month targeting a car in Rafah.

Dahdouh entered Egypt along with a relative on Tuesday, after four of his children made the crossing last week, he told AFP.

Khaled Elbalshy, head of the Egyptian journalists’ syndicate, said the organization had spoken to Dahdouh after he left Gaza.

The syndicate “thanks all the Egyptian state agencies and those who made efforts to help in the case of Wael Dahdouh and treating wounded Palestinians,” Elbalshy wrote on Facebook.

At least 82 journalists have been killed during the war, 75 of them in Gaza, according to a tally from the Committee to Protect Journalists.

At least 24,285 Palestinians, more than 70 percent of them women, young children and adolescents, have been killed in the Gaza Strip in Israeli bombardments and ground offensive since October 7, according to the Hamas government’s health ministry.

The unprecedented Hamas attack on October 7 resulted in the death of around 1,140 people in Israel, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Fighters also dragged about 250 hostages back to Gaza, 132 of whom Israel says remain there, including at least 25 believed to have been killed.