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

Search Site

ADNOC Distribution 2025 dividend $700m

The company had reported EBITDA of $1.17 bn in 2025.

Empower okays $119.1m H2 2025 dividend

The dividend is equivalent to 43.75% of paid-up capital.

Alujain widens 2025 loss

The increase in loss is due to impairment charges, weaker prices.

Masar 2025 net profit $262m

Higher land plot sales boost revenue and operating income.

Tasnee’s 2025 losses deepen

The petrochemicals' company's revenue also fell 17.7 percent.

US State Department says 60,000 emails taken in alleged Chinese hack

  • Microsoft revealed in July that a Chinese hacking group had breached its email platform and accessed messages from around 25 organizations including US government agencies
  • "It was approximately 60,000 unclassified emails that were exfiltrated as a part of that breach," State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters

Washington, United States– The US State Department said Thursday that hackers took around 60,000 emails, although none of them classified, in an attack which Microsoft has blamed on China.

Microsoft revealed in July that a Chinese hacking group had breached its email platform and accessed messages from around 25 organizations including US government agencies.

“It was approximately 60,000 unclassified emails that were exfiltrated as a part of that breach,” State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters.

“Classified systems were not hacked. These only related to the unclassified system,” he said.

Miller said that the State Department has not formally assigned blame but had no reason to doubt Microsoft’s finding that the hackers were from China.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken raised the hacking in July when he met with senior Chinese official Wang Yi in Jakarta on the sidelines of a Southeast Asian meeting.

The United States has described China as its top competitor, with Blinken earlier Thursday saying that Beijing was determined to replace the United States as the world’s top power.

A State Department report issued Thursday warned in dire terms about China’s efforts in the information sphere, saying that Beijing’s “digital authoritarianism” and disinformation could reshape the world if unchecked.