Meet the inspirational champion helping women in the Mideast make their mark

Businesswoman Zainab Al-Farhan Al-Imam is a truly inspirational figure. (Photo supplied)
Updated 06 March 2018
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Meet the inspirational champion helping women in the Mideast make their mark

LONDON: Businesswoman Zainab Al-Farhan Al-Imam is a truly inspirational figure.
The founder and director of the Women’s Growth and Success Foundation (WGSF), she is a champion for the advancement and promotion of women in the Middle East in business and the arts.
Al-Imam, the owner of import-export business A&Z Traders Ltd, is from the UAE and now lives in London. She is passionate about helping women to realize their dreams and ambitions, using her own drive to succeed and the vision behind her successful business career as an example and motivation.
What first strikes you about Al-Imam is her positive energy – you cannot help but be inspired by her positive can-do attitude and enthusiasm for turning dreams into reality.
This outlook was forged very early on in her family life. She acknowledges the vital role played by her parents in encouraging creativity, responsibility, resilience, driving ambition and respect for the principles underpinning the family business.
She credits her father for his support, her mother for inspiration, her husband for strength and her brothers and children for providing motivation.
“Being brought up in a business atmosphere, I learnt that success does not come easy,” she said. “It comes after hard work and good planning. You go step by step – no need to jump.”
She is grateful to her father for giving her the opportunity to work alongside him in the family business in Sharjah, in the UAE, after she completed a BA in Business Management at Richmond University in London. This, she said, was a great opportunity to learn and to understand that business is not only about money and profit but about adding value to the community and supporting people in need. It was not long before she spotted an opportunity to make her own mark.
“The idea came to me around 1995 when I noticed there was a gap in the sector catering to people with special needs or, to use the much more positive term now used in the UAE, ‘People of Determination’,” she said.
“I started building up a trading company, Al Taheal Medical Equipment, focusing on products for special-needs children and adults. These included items such as medical beds and mattresses, wheelchairs, trolleys and standing frames – everything that a special-needs person might need from birth through to old age.
“A lot of people did not take me seriously as they couldn’t see the need and demand. This was because people with special needs were kept invisible at that time.
“I set up a big showroom and store and forged an international network with agents from all over the world: Taiwan, China, the US, Spain, Germany and the UK. This required a big investment because every item I imported had a multitude of specifications. For example, I had to have a range of wheelchairs to cater to all ages and sizes, from junior to adult and extra large, not forgetting the importance of having suitable wheelchair colors. I became the first and only female supplier of such products in the Middle East who could guarantee delivery within three days of an order being placed.”
This business proved very successful and Al-Imam found that with her growing reputation she was in demand, particularly among women’s organizations, associations and councils. Within this growing network of contacts she became a key driver of initiatives to promote and help women achieve career success.
When she and her husband moved to London with their young family, she discovered that the successes of Middle East businesswomen and entrepreneurs were largely unknown outside the region. She resolved to change this state of affairs.
“I spoke to my friends and said: ‘We have to do something’. Yes, we are working very hard locally but are we noticeable globally? I set about working to build our networks and raise our profiles by establishing WGSF in 2010.
“I invited pioneering business women from the MENA region and the Far East to London to expose them to the global market. The UK was the best place to start, being a key investment destination for Arabs.”
This strategy has proved highly effective, as evidenced through the success of major events Al-Imam has organized, such as WGSF forums, Ziryab fashion shows and Konooz Fine Art Auctions. The quality of the participants, coupled with high-profile venues, attract considerable media attention and big VIP audiences. Events have been staged at the stunning riverside HQ of the Lord Mayor of London, at the city’s Westfield shopping center, and leading hotels such as The Lanesborough and Jumeirah Carlton Tower.
The creative achievements of women in the Middle East are just as important to showcase as their business acumen.
“Konooz Fine Art Auction, with the kind participation of Christie’s and Bonhams, provides a platform for emerging and established artists to show their work under one roof while also raising money for worthwhile charities,” said Al-Imam. With Ziryab Fashion Show, my aim was to showcase the designers’ work in public venues.
“I believe there is a need to change global perceptions of Middle East women in particular, who are often totally misrepresented in the media. We are talking about talented, educated, creative fashion designers. I also wanted to widen their network by arranging meetings with fashion consultant and bankers, buyers.”
The fifth Ziryab fashion show, to be held at the Westfield in July 2018, will pay tribute to the UAE’s groundbreaking initiative, “People of Determination”, which turns the concept of disability into one of ability.
People of Determination is the brainchild of Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, vice president of the UAE and ruler of Dubai, as part of his national strategy for empowering people with disabilities.
“Disability is in fact the inability to make progress and achievements,” Sheikh Mohammed said. “The achievements that people of determination have made in various spheres over the past years are proof that determination and strong will can do the impossible and encourage people to counter challenges and difficult circumstances while firmly achieving their goals.”
Al-Imam has no doubt about what it takes to achieve success in business.
“Hard work,” she said. “Success is not easy. For women, with all their responsibilities of home and children, there is a lot of additional pressure and they can easily lose their focus. They need to have a strong concentration on the business in order to make it. No woman can do it alone without support.”
However, she also emphasized the importance of valuing and fully experiencing every chapter of life.
“You can never get time back, so you had better make the best of every phase,” she said. “Life goes in stages and it is important to enjoy each stage. Enjoy being a teenager, enjoy being a wife and a mother.
“It is very tough combining a business with a family. I was very lucky to have my mother so close – our life in the Gulf is so much easier with help in the house – but in London, for many women, it is so difficult. So I support women in their efforts to build an environment that allows them to fulfill their multiple roles within both the family and workplace.”
Faced with the challenges, many women give up too easily she added.
“You need a strong will,” she said. “If you want to do it then do it. I did not achieve success by wishing for it or hoping for it but by working for it. Good time management is the secret of success. Learn to manage your time. For example. if you must achieve your target and there is no plan B, wake up earlier to do it.”
The qualities Al-Imam values most in her employees include respect for others, respect for the business and a willingness to constantly improve.
“I know how to draw out the special abilities in each of my staff,” she said. “They have been with me for a long time – we are like a family. For me it is very important that my staff show respect for everyone they interact with. This is something I value very highly. Whatever their skill set is, I expect them to be capable of working independently. I trust them to do the work, and most important is that I appreciate their work and am so happy to have them around me.
“My father taught me how to respect our employees and how to conduct business, mostly how to work hard. He also advised me to attend family-business forums, which educated me in how to deal with issues that might arise in the family and how to deal with different opinions and obstacles. One of the rules was that we were not allowed to leave the meeting room until we had concluded a satisfactory outcome for all parties – even if that took the whole day.
“I know how to make a business out of nothing. There is always a gap in the market or a demand in a certain sector.”
Al-Imam is disappointed that the achievements of women in the Middle East, and in Saudi Arabia in particular, are so often ignored or downplayed in western media.
“Saudi Arabian women have achieved so much already in business and the professions,” she said. “They are successful but they are not represented accurately in the media. As the regulations have changed in the country these women have become more visible, but the fact is they have been there, contributing their skills for a long time – just not in a public way.”
She also believes strongly that it is misguided to depict men as “holding women back”.
What, then, does she hope will be the greatest achievement resulting from her work in the years to come?
“It is my hope that the women I am supporting and championing now in their businesses will go on to support the next generation of young women,” she said.


Gazan twins in Cannes warn ‘nothing left’ of homeland

Updated 20 May 2025
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Gazan twins in Cannes warn ‘nothing left’ of homeland

CANNES: Twin Gazan filmmakers Arab and Tarzan Nasser said they never thought the title of their new film “Once Upon A Time In Gaza” would have such heartbreaking resonance.
“Right now there is nothing left of Gaza,” said Tarzan when it premiered on Monday at the Cannes film festival.
Since militants from Palestinian group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, more than 18 months of Israeli bombardment has ravaged large swathes of the Palestinian territory and killed tens of thousands of people.
Israel has vowed to “take control of all” the besieged territory of more than two million inhabitants, where United Nations agencies have warned of famine following Israel’s two-month total blockade.
Israel allowed in several aid trucks on Monday but the UN said it was only “a drop in the ocean” of needs.
The Nasser brothers, who left Gaza in 2012, said their new film set in 2007, when Hamas Islamists seized control of the strip, explains the lead-up to today’s catastrophic war.
“Once Upon A Time In Gaza,” which screened in the festival’s Un Certain Regard section, follows friends Yahia and Osama as they try to make a little extra cash by selling drugs stuffed into falafel sandwiches.
Using a manual meat grinder that does not rely on rare electricity, student Yahia blends up fava beans and fresh herbs to make the patty-shaped fritters in the back of Osama’s small run-down eatery, while dreaming of being able to leave the Israeli-blockaded coastal strip.
Charismatic hustler Osama meanwhile visits pharmacy after pharmacy to amass as many pills as he can with stolen prescriptions, pursued by a corrupt cop.


Israel first imposed a blockade on Gaza in June 2006 after militants there took one of its soldiers, and reinforced it in September 2007 several months after Hamas took power.
“The blockade was gradually tightened, tightened until reaching the genocide we see today,” said Tarzan.
“Until today they are counting the calories that enter,” he added.
An Israeli NGO said in 2012 that documents showed Israeli authorities had calculated that 2,279 calories per person per day was deemed sufficient to prevent malnutrition in Gaza.
The defense ministry however claimed it had “never counted calories” when allowing aid in.
Despite all this, Gazans have always shown a love of life and been incredibly resilient, the directors said.
“My father is until now in northern Gaza,” Tarzan said, explaining the family’s two homes had been destroyed.
But before then, “every time a missile hit, damaging a wall or window, he’d fix it up the next day,” he said.
In films, “the last thing I want to do is talk about Israel and what it’s doing,” he added.
“Human beings are more important — who they are, how they’re living and adapting to this really tough reality.”
In their previous films, the Nasser twins followed an elderly fisherman enamoured with his neighbor in the market in “Gaza Mon Amour” and filmed women trapped at the hairdresser’s in their 2015’s “Degrade.”
Like “Once Upon A Time in Gaza,” they were all shot in Jordan.

As the siege takes its toll in “Once Upon A Time In Gaza,” a desolate Yahia is recruited to star in a Hamas propaganda film.
In Gaza, “we don’t have special effects but we do have live bullets,” the producer says in one scene.
Arab said, long before Gazan tap water became salty and US President Donald Trump sparked controversy by saying he wanted to turn their land into the “Riviera of the Middle East,” the coastal strip was a happy place.
“I remember when I was little, Gaza actually was a riviera. It was the most beautiful place. I can still taste the fresh water on my tongue,” he said.
“Now Trump comes up with this great invention that he wants to turn it into a riviera after Israel completely destroyed it?“
Hamas’s October 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Militants also took 251 hostages, 57 of whom remain in Gaza including 34 the military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed 53,486 people in Gaza, mostly civilians, according to Gaza health authorities, whose figures the United Nations deems reliable.
Gaza health authorities said at least 44 people were killed there in the early hours of Tuesday.


Rapper Werenoi, France’s biggest-selling music artist in recent years, dies at age 31

Updated 18 May 2025
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Rapper Werenoi, France’s biggest-selling music artist in recent years, dies at age 31

PARIS: Rapper Werenoi, France’s biggest-selling music artist in recent years, has died at the age of 31, his producer and record company said.
The artist, whose real name was Jérémy Bana Owona, was the number 1 album seller in France in 2023 and 2024 according to the ranking of the National Union of Phonographic Industry, which includes in-store and e-commerce sales as well as plays on streaming services.
“It’s with immense sadness that we’ve learned of Werenoi’s passing,” his record company Believe said on Instagram. “All our thoughts are with his family, loved ones, his team and everyone who knew him.”
“Rest in peace my brother, I love you,” his producer Babs posted on X.
French media report Werenoi died early Saturday in a Paris hospital. The cause of his death has not been made public.
Werenoi first became known to the French public in 2021 when he posted his song “Guadalajara” on YouTube and it was viewed hundreds of thousand times.
He released three albums, “Carré” in 2023, “Pyramide” the next year and “Diamant Noir” last month, making him one of the biggest names in French rap.
Several French rappers posted tributes on social media. French-Malian pop star Aya Nakamura, who featured on his second album, wrote : “Rest in peace my dude. A news that saddens me and courage to the loved ones especially.”
“He made a difference for the quality of his songs, his melodies and his punchlines,” singer Pascal Obispo, who had accompanied Werenoi on the piano at a 2023 Paris concert, told French newspaper Le Parisien.


Adidas, Puma family feud to be turned into TV series

Updated 18 May 2025
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Adidas, Puma family feud to be turned into TV series

CANNES: The bitter brotherly feud that sparked the creation of sports-shoe brands Adidas and Puma in the same small German town in the 1940s is to be turned into a television series with the help of family archives, its producers announced Sunday.
Hollywood-based film producer No Fat Ego is backing the project, which has the blessing of the family behind the Adidas empire founded by Adolf “Adi” Dassler.
It will delve into one of the most fascinating fraternal blow-ups in corporate history, which pitted Adi against his brother Rudolf (“Rudi“) who went on to create rival Puma.
The two men jointly ran a family-owned footwear company before falling out during World War II, with their post-conflict animus splitting their town of Herzogenaurach to this day.
Scriptwriter Mark Williams, behind the hit Netflix series “Ozark,” has been hired to lead the project and is currently going through Dassler family home videos and memorabilia to work on the story.
“Everybody knows the brands, but the story behind them is something we don’t really fully know,” Williams told AFP at the Cannes film festival.
One of the most sensitive areas — particularly for the reputations of the multi-billion-dollar footwear companies today — will be how the brothers are portrayed during the war period.
Both became members of the Nazi party in the 1930s, as was customary for the business elite at the time.
Rudi went to fight, however, and was arrested by Allied forces on his return to a defeated Germany.
“Adi stayed home and tried to keep the company alive,” Williams added.
Their factory was seized as part of the war effort and converted into a munitions plant.
The series promises to be a “Succession-type drama between the family” set over several generations, Williams explained, comparing it to the earlier hit HBO series.


The head of No Fat Ego, Niels Juul, who has produced Martin Scorsese’s most recent movies, said he was originally drawn to the story after learning about Adidas’s collaboration with legendary black American runner Jesse Owens.
Partly thanks to Adidas’s innovative spiked shoes, Owens became one of the stars of the 1936 Berlin Olympics which Hitler had hoped would showcase white German supremacy.
No Fat Ego intends to develop the series with full editorial independence before offering it to streaming platforms.
“We want to have the creative control, and Mark has to have absolute silence and quiet to do what he does,” Juul told AFP.
 


Iraq’s first filmmaker in Cannes says sanctions no piece of cake

Updated 18 May 2025
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Iraq’s first filmmaker in Cannes says sanctions no piece of cake

CANNES: Hasan Hadi, the first filmmaker from Iraq to be selected for the prestigious Cannes Festival, said economic embargoes like those imposed in his childhood under Saddam Hussein did not work.
“Sanctions empower dictators,” he told AFP, as they concentrate scant resources in their hands and only make them “more brutal.”
“In the history of the world, there was no one time when they (imposed) sanctions and the president couldn’t eat.”
Hadi’s first feature film, “The President’s Cake,” has received very good reviews since premiering Friday in the Directors’ Fortnight section.
Cinema publication Deadline said it was “head and shoulders above” some of the films in the running for the festival’s Palme d’Or top prize, and “could turn out to be Iraq’s first nominee for an Oscar.”
The film follows nine-year-old Lamia after she has the misfortune of being picked by her school teacher to bake the class a cake for the president’s birthday, or be denounced for disloyalty.
It is the early 1990s, the country is under crippling UN sanctions. She and her grandmother — with whom she shares a reed home in Iraq’s southern marshlands — can barely afford to eat.
As they set off into town to hunt down unaffordable ingredients, with Lamia’s pet cockerel and their last meagre belongings to sell, the film plunges into the social reality — and everyday petty corruption — of 1990s Iraq.
The near-total trade and financial embargo imposed on Iraq after it invaded Kuwait “demolished the moral fabric of society,” Hadi said.
It sent the country “hundreds of years back.”


The filmmaker said he did not taste cake until he was in his early teens, after the US-led invasion in 2003 toppled Saddam and sanctions were lifted.
Instead, with processed sugar and eggs out of reach, there was “date cake” — whose main ingredient was squished dates, sometimes with a candle on top.
“As a kid you’re sad that you’re not getting your cake,” he said. But as you grow up, you realize what your parents must have gone through to put food on the table.
“Not only my family, but all of these people had to sell literally everything,” he said. “There were people that were even selling their door frames.”
Hadi and his team shot the film entirely in Iraq.
It beautifully captures the ancient wetlands in the south of the country, listed as a World Heritage Site since 2016 and reputedly the home of the biblical Garden of Eden.
Saddam drained them in the 1990s, trying to flush out rebels hiding in the reeds.
But after the US-led invasion, authorities opened up the valves and the wetlands flourished again — even if they are now threatened by climate change.
Hadi said he chose the location partly to make the point that “the marshes stayed and Saddam went away.”


To re-create the Iraq of his youth, Hadi and his crew paid close attention to detail, amassing vintage clothes and bringing a barber on set to trim the hair and moustaches of everyone down to the extras.
They scouted out the best locations, shooting one scene in a small eatery reputed to have been frequented by Saddam himself.
They chose non-actors to play ordinary Iraqis under the ever-present eyes of the president in posters, pictures frames and murals.
Hadi said hearing US President Donald Trump say recently that he planned to lift sanctions on Syria after Islamists toppled president Bashar Assad last year was “amazing.”
“I don’t think the sanctions helped in any way to get rid of Bashar, but definitely empowered him to kill more people, and torture more people,” he said.


Austria wins Eurovision crown with JJ’s song Wasted Love

Updated 18 May 2025
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Austria wins Eurovision crown with JJ’s song Wasted Love

BASEL, Switzerland: Austria won the Eurovision Song Contest 2025 in Swiss host city Basel on Saturday, with the country’s first victory since bearded drag queen Conchita Wurst won in 2014.
Operatic singer JJ won ahead of Israel in the world’s biggest music competition, which was watched by more than 160 million people across the world.
The win was Austria’s third in the competition, following Conchita’s success and Udo Juergens’ victory in 1966.
JJ, a 24-year-old from Vienna, combined elements of opera, techno and high-pitched vocals in his song Wasted Love, winning the hearts of the professional juries and telephone voters.
Switzerland won the right to host Eurovision after Swiss rapper and singer Nemo won last year’s contest in Malmo, Sweden.
Fans traveled from across Europe and beyond to Basel, with 100,000 people attending Eurovision events in the city, including the final.
Eurovision, which stresses its political neutrality, has also faced controversy again this year due to the war in Gaza.
Israel’s entrant, Yuval Raphael, was at the Nova music festival during the October 7, 2023, attack by Hamas militants on southern Israel that killed 1,200 people and saw 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli officials.
Pro-Palestinian groups urged the European Broadcasting Union to exclude Israel over Gaza, where more than 50,000 people have been killed in the ensuing offensive by Israel, according to local health officials.
Around 200 protesters mounted a demonstration in Basel on Saturday evening.
Spanish public broadcaster RTVE also showed a message before the start of the Eurovision show saying “When human rights are at stake, silence is not an option. Peace and Justice for Palestine.”