Sunday, May 04, 2025

UAE Launches Influencer Academy to ‘Whitewash’ Country’s Reputation, Say Critics DUBAI (Middle East Eye)

DUBAI (Middle East Eye) – A new influencer academy launched in the United Arab Emirates has been branded the latest attempt to “whitewash” the country’s rights record.

The new program, co-founded by the Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism and travel content agency Beautiful Destinations, offers media training for “students” to help bolster the tourism industry of the emirate, which has become a hotspot for social media influencers in recent years.
Students applying for the company’s training program are given flights and accommodation in a luxury serviced apartment as well as a liveable income for the three-month program.
Participants will be expected to post about their experiences travelling in Dubai, and then awarded a certificate from Dubai College of Tourism. “The really special ones” are offered a full-time job with Beautiful Destinations at the end.
The company’s CEO, Jeremy Jauncey, told the Times his agency was “not looking for hosts, we’re not looking for presenters, we’re not looking for people that want to build a career in front of the camera.
“It’s very much about. What’s your ¬ability to tell a travel story?” he said.
But rights groups and Sudanese activists have called the move another initiative by the Persian Gulf state to improve its image as it faces accusations of facilitating war crimes and genocide in Sudan.
Abdullahi Halakhe, senior advocate for East and Southern Africa at Refugees International, said the academy was the latest attempt by the UAE to draw in foreigners who make “no critical examination” of the country to launder its reputation.
“It falls within Dubai’s usual modus operandi... everything about it is a carefully cultivated, manicured movie set kind of lifestyle,” he told Middle East Eye.
“Underneath that largely manufactured plastic existence are undeniable, horrendous human rights violations anywhere it has touched over the last 20 years.”
Earlier this month, the Sudanese government took the UAE to the International Court of Justice, accusing it of violating the Genocide Convention by aiding the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a Sudanese paramilitary group with whom it has been fighting since April 2023.
The UAE saw a record 18.72 million international visitors last year, while the country has splashed out on numerous sporting events and clubs across the world, as well as tourism advertising that is becoming increasingly ubiquitous in capital cities and online.
However, the media blitz belies the fact that the UAE has repeatedly been accused of employing extrajudicial methods to crack down on dissent within its borders and that its record on human rights has been widely condemned. 
Scores of political prisoners have been jailed since the 2011 pro-democracy Arab Spring in trials that have been condemned as opaque by monitoring groups.
Foreign travelers have been targeted by the authorities as well. British citizens Matthew Hedges and Ali Issa Ahmad were detained in 2018 and 2019 respectively and suffered mistreatment and torture in jail before being released.  

No comments:

Post a Comment