UntoldMag
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UntoldMag.org is a platform that challenges the established and amplifies the untold, bridging the gaps between rigorous analysis and accessible discourse and reimagining knowledge as a shared, dynamic, decentralized, and deeply situated experience.
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Read the full investigation by Ethan Rooney on UntoldMag.
🔗https://f.mtr.cool/chcfnmtavh
 #Palestine #Surveillance #AI #Occupation #Gaza
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As Israel faces accusations of genocide in Gaza, Palestinians- the world’s most surveilled people- live under a regime that reduces human life to data points.
The unblinking eye fixed on Palestine today may soon define the rest of us.
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Palestine has become a laboratory.
Technologies tested on a population with no power to object are later exported to police forces in Europe and the US.
Occupation has become automation.
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Amnesty traced the surveillance infrastructure to Dutch firm TKH Group, with Hewlett Packard, Hikvision, and Microsoft Azure also providing technology.
A system of control built in Palestine and funded globally.
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“You no longer feel like a person,” a Hebron resident told researchers.
“You are a file, a face, an entry in a database.”
Even going to the local shop has become a source of stress and fear.
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A newer system, Red Wolf, goes further.
It automatically scans everyone at checkpoints, adding unrecognised faces to databases without consent.
Human Rights Watch calls this “a new phase of frictionless occupation.”
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In the occupied West Bank, Israeli soldiers use an app called Blue Wolf.
They photograph Palestinians, upload faces to vast databases, and wait for a colour code: green, yellow, or red.
Amnesty found soldiers were even rewarded for collecting the most faces.
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In East Jerusalem and Hebron, cameras line the streets “every five metres,” according to Amnesty International.
The result: “an atmosphere of fear, anxiety and repression,” further entrenching what rights groups call automated apartheid.
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Imagine walking through your own neighbourhood and being stopped at a checkpoint - not by a soldier, but by a camera.
An algorithm scans your face.
Green, you pass.
Red, you are turned back.
For Palestinians, this is not dystopian fiction - it’s daily life.
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Read Who Will Control Syria’s Oil? by Harrison Budak on UntoldMag.
🔗 https://f.mtr.cool/aagkswxpyq

#Syria #OilPolitics #EnergyJustice #PostWarEconomy #Sanctions #UntoldMag #Geopolitics #MiddleEast #Croatia #INA #HumanRights #TransitionalJustice #ResourcePolitics
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Syria’s oil once symbolized sovereignty and progress.
Today, it risks becoming a new chapter in the story of global extraction - where profit eclipses justice, and those who endured the war remain excluded from its rewards.
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Meanwhile, UN reports warn of abuses, killings, and insecurity in some Syrian regions.
“Policies failing to protect civilians and minorities,” said UN Envoy Geir Pedersen, “undermine any chance of rebuilding a Syria that works for all.”
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INA’s part-owner, Hungary’s MOL Group, remains locked in a decade-long arbitration with the Croatian government.
At the World Bank’s ICSID, MOL was awarded $235 million, highlighting how energy politics and corruption intersect well beyond Syria’s borders.
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Energy consultant Christina Abi notes:
“The terms of the contract have changed by default - they don’t apply to the situation anymore.”
Still, INA insists its rights remain valid - a claim that may reignite old disputes over ownership and compensation.
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With sanctions relaxed, Gulf and European companies are positioning themselves for new contracts with Syria’s transitional leadership.
The country’s total output has collapsed to just 80,000 - 100,000 barrels per day - a fraction of its pre-war levels.
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At the center is Croatia’s INA, whose history in Syria dates back to the 1960s.
Once producing 350,000 barrels a day in partnership with the Assad regime, INA withdrew in 2012 under sanctions - but quietly kept assets “in case geopolitical circumstances change.”
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After more than a decade of war and sanctions, Syria’s oil is back in global focus.
As restrictions ease, Gulf investors and European firms are lining up to reclaim access to its battered oil fields.
Who stands to benefit this time?
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Read more on UntoldMag:
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#Palestine #Gaza #21stCenturyGenocide #MemoryAndResistance #UntoldMag #MediaForJustice
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From Across War Zones, Targeting Healthcare Has Become a Strategy, Not an Accident by Walid el Houri
Fifteen Palestinian medics were found executed - hands tied, shot in the head.
Healthcare is no longer collateral damage; it has become the battlefield itself.
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From No Pride in Genocide: A Comic Strip by Joseph Kai
Zionist propaganda weaponizes queer Palestinians, twisting liberation into a tool of erasure.
Visibility becomes another battlefield - where queerness is instrumentalized to justify genocide.
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From Beyond Project Nimbus by Reem Almasri
As bombs fall on Gaza, Silicon Valley profits from the infrastructure of war.
Nimbus and the recruitment of Unit 8200 veterans, Big Tech has become an arm of occupation - embedding surveillance and AI into the machinery of genocide.
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From A Chronicle of Loss and Unending Grief by Abdalhadi Alijla
For Palestinians, grief is unending - layered across generations, interrupted before it can heal.
A grief that breathes between rubble and exile, passed on like memory itself.
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From The Memory of the City Resisting Genocide by Mariam Mohammed Al Khateeb
In the ruins, memory refuses erasure.
“The stories of the people are the story of the city - its erased history. Even amid destruction, its memory resists.”
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From “I Carry Their Grave Wherever I Go” by Husam Maarouf
In Gaza, mourning has become a privilege.
With DNA testing banned, families guess who to bury - walking over unmarked graves of the unknown.
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From The Cartographic War by Zina Q.
Google Earth’s new satellite images of Gaza reveal “haunted house” pins marking destroyed homes - a new form of psychological warfare that turns ruins into data.