Ideas from the heart could help make employment more attainable for people with disabilities

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Kim Charlson was 11 when she started losing her eyesight because of glaucoma. An operation a year and a half later not only didn’t help, it resulted in complications that hastened her blindness.

Her pragmatic parents insisted she learn Braille, a key to literacy for people who are blind or have low vision. Without that literacy, Charlson likely wouldn’t have gone on to college or a career. Only 13 percent of blind students in the United States know Braille, and roughly 70 percent of adults who are blind or have low vision are unemployed.

Those troubling statistics are one reason Charlson is excited about an app that will help increase the amount of time students can spend learning and practicing Braille. ObjectiveEd, the company that’s developing the Braille AI Tutor app, is a new recipient of Microsoft’s AI for Accessibility grants to people using AI-powered technology to make the world a more inclusive place. Ten other recipients joining the program in conjunction with National Disability Awareness Month include City University of LondoninABLEiMerciv  and The Open University

“We have a huge opportunity and a responsibility to be making technology smarter and more useful for people with disabilities,” says Mary Bellard, Microsoft senior architect lead for accessibility. The aim of the AI for Accessibility program, which began in 2018 and now has 32 grantees, is to help people “build something really useful at the intersection of AI, accessibility and disability.”

The Braille AI Tutor app is the latest project for ObjectiveEd’s president, Marty Schultz, a longtime software developer and volunteer teacher who created an iPhone game five years ago called “Blindfold Racer” for children who are blind. It led to more than 80 games for the iPhone and iPad that have together been downloaded more than a half-million times.

If you only get an hour a week with the teacher — I mean, how many kids would learn how to read print if they only had an hour a week of instruction?

Charlson, former president of the American Council of the Blind, is a big fan of Schultz’s work. So is Judy Dixon, consumer relations officer for the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, and the two women often talked with him about the importance of Braille education for literacy and employment. Schultz took it to heart — and to the drawing board.

Some students who are blind or have low vision attend schools that are geared to their needs, and where Braille is taught and used daily. But many attend public schools and learn Braille from teachers who visit their schools once a week, spending about an hour with each student.

Marty Schultz and Kim Charlson
Marty Schultz of ObjectiveEd with Kim Charlson, former president of the American Council of the Blind. (Photo courtesy of ObjectiveEd)

“If you only get an hour a week with the teacher — I mean, how many kids would learn how to read print if they only had an hour a week of instruction?” says Charlson. “It’s just not enough. You have to immerse yourself in it at that developmental stage, or you’re not going to be as fluent in it as you need to be as an adult.”

The Braille AI Tutor app will incorporate AI-based speech recognition, using Microsoft’s Azure Speech API, to help students practice reading Braille with personalized, gamified learning plans. The app will send a word or a sentence to a refreshable Braille display, one of the types of hardware used for reading Braille. The student will feel the word in Braille, say the word or sentence out loud, and then the app will process the audio feedback and let the student know immediately if they are correct or not.

Teachers will be able to monitor students’ progress, with results sent to a web dashboard.

“We see our role as not teaching the student but giving the student the ability to practice when that teacher’s not around,” Schultz says. “The teacher teaches, and we make practicing fun and engaging and something that can be done without the teacher being there. So the next time the student meets with the teacher, the student has made some real progress.”

Schultz says the extra practice will help students “accelerate more quickly through school, which will lead to college, and to much better employment opportunities in the future.”

Arjun Mali and Bin Liu
Arjun Mali, left, and Bin Liu of iMerciv both have had family members who experienced vision loss. (Photo courtesy of iMerciv)

Two longtime friends who watched their loved ones go through vision loss found another way to help: using technology to help people get to work or otherwise navigate their cities.

Bin Liu and Arjun Mali are from different parts of the world, but their lives took parallel paths. Liu, born in China, moved at age 9 with his family to Gaborone, Botswana, for several years because of his father’s work as a civil engineer. Mali spent parts of his childhood in India and the United Arab Emirates, where his father worked for a while in sales of fiber optic networks.

About 10 years ago, Liu’s father was diagnosed with inoperable glaucoma. Mali’s grandmother in India had partial sight, and he sometimes accompanied her to a local school for the blind, where she volunteered, to read and teach English to the children.

The two were in university when they met in Toronto and became friends playing poker. They often talked about some of the frustrations and indignities faced by people who are blind or have low vision, as well as ways to improve mobility for those with vision impairment.

“Vision loss affected our families, and we saw an opportunity to create a technological solution that would impact that community,” says Mali, who graduated with an economics degree from McMaster University in Ontario.

Liu, who has a civil engineering degree from the University of Toronto, had been searching for devices that could help his dad navigate obstacles more precisely with his cane, and says he didn’t find much. Liu and Mali developed their first product together, the BuzzClip.

It’s a 2-ounce, clip-on wearable device that uses ultrasound to detect obstacles in a person’s path, then alerts the user with different vibrations and frequencies.

Vision loss affected our families, and we saw an opportunity to create a technological solution that would impact that community.

Early on, the duo received support from the Impact Centre, the University of Toronto’s accelerator for startup tech companies, and in 2014 they formed their company, iMerciv, Inc.

Now among AI for Accessibility’s latest grantees, iMerciv is developing a navigation app called MapinHood for pedestrians who are blind or have low vision, and who want to choose the routes they take if they’re walking to work, or to any destination.

The app will audibly alert a person to hazards — from construction to high-crime areas — to avoid while walking, as well as let them know about things they might need, like water fountains, benches or ramps. It’s all based on machine learning, crowdsourced data and open source information from local law enforcement.

Four adults in park
From left, Vanessa Bourget, orientation and mobility intern at the Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB); Mark Rankin and Emily Baarda, CNIB orientation and mobility specialists; and Yusup Mollayev, iMerciv vice president of data and analytics, at Sherwood Park in Toronto, Ontario, where they were testing audio prompts of saved geotags, such as benches, in the MapinHood app. (Photo courtesy of iMerciv)

Current navigation systems, in general, are optimized to generate routes that are the fastest or shortest for getting to a destination, but Liu says, “that’s not always the best route for pedestrians with disabilities” trying to find the best walking route to work, shops or parks, for example.

The app is in now in the alpha stages of being tested with help from the nonprofit Canadian National Institute for the Blind, which also worked with iMerciv on the BuzzClip. The app uses iMerciv’s custom routing engine, and with the AI for Accessibility grant, will use Azure machine learning, storage and virtual machines.

MapinHood in Toronto will also be a template for the app in other cities.

“Our focus is on personalization — making the app as flexible and as customizable as it can be,” Liu says. “Because with navigation for pedestrians in general — and especially for people with disabilities — you cannot have a single solution that fits all needs.”

Three men and a woman look at computer screen
From left, clockwise, Claire Barnett, Nilanjan Sarkar, Josh Wade and Michael Breen of Vanderbilt University. (Joe Howell/Vanderbilt University)

For people with autism, sometimes the biggest hurdle to employment is the interview. That’s the focus of Nilanjan Sarkar. A family member – a cousin’s son – has autism, and in doing research later, Sarkar learned that people on the autism spectrum sometimes respond better when they deal with intelligent systems, such as chatbots, instead of people.

Sarkar, director of the Robotics and Autonomous Systems Lab at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, is now leading a project aimed at helping people with autism perform well in job interviews using intelligent systems. Career Interview Readiness in Virtual Reality (CIRVR) is being developed in conjunction with Vanderbilt University’s Frist Center for Autism & Innovation, having joined the AI for Accessibility program earlier this year.

In the U.S., there are approximately 2.5 million adults on the autistism spectrum, Sarkar says. “Sixty percent or more of them can do some work. However, 85 percent of those able to work are either underemployed or unemployed.”

This system aims to help people be better prepared when they actually go out for an interview.

CIRVR is a virtual reality job interview platform that uses Azure AI and incorporates a computer avatar that acts as the interviewer, a wearable device that tracks interviewees’ physiological measures such as heart rate and skin sweating to infer their anxiety using machine learning techniques, and an eye tracker to gauge attention.

“This system will quantitively, objectively gather lots of data regarding their anxiety, where they’re looking, eye contact, how they’re responding, what should they have done — and we believe we can create a feedback system so that by repeated practice, they will improve their interviewing skills,” Sarkar says.

“People with autism sometimes like to interact with things that respond in a routine way, in a predictable way,” Sarkar says. “Human response, human interactions are not predictable, and that can be confusing.”

Many times, he says, open-ended interview questions such as “Can you tell me about an instance where you resolved a conflict?” or “How did you help a teammate?” might create anxiety. So can tests with urgency, such as being asked to solve a programming problem quickly.

Sarkar says CIRVR testing has begun and will provide feedback to the interviewees so they can practice improving how they handle interviews. Overall results will also be evaluated for trends to possibly share with hiring managers at interested companies, so they can learn how to modify their interview structure, or how to ask questions differently, if needed, Sarkar says.

“We assume the interview protocol structure will not change overnight,” he says. “So, this system aims to help people be better prepared when they actually go out for an interview.”

All AI for Accessibility grantees “have so much passion and expertise in the area of accessible technology,” says Bellard of Microsoft.

“The amount of potential that there is for software or hardware to better meet the needs of people with disabilities, and to raise the bar of what customers can come to expect of the role technology could play in their lives, is just an amazing opportunity.”

Learn more about AI for Accessibility grants, and about Microsoft’s Autism Hiring Program.

Lead image: Vision rehabilitation therapist Ashley Colburn shows 11-year-old Steven DeAngelis refreshable Braille devices at the Carroll Center for the Blind. The Newton, Massachusetts, center helped ObjectiveEd test the games it developed for people who are blind. (Photo by Dan DeLong)

Apple premieres “See,” coming to Apple TV+ November 1

The Show Stars Jason Momoa, Alfre Woodard, Hera Hilmar, Sylvia Hoeks, Christian Camargo, Archie Madekwe, Nesta Cooper and Yadira Guevara-Prip

The cast of “See” at the show’s premiere.
The cast of “See” at the show’s premiere at Regency Village Theater in Los Angeles, California. Left to right: Alfre Woodard, Jason Momoa, Nesta Cooper, Archie Madekwe, Hera Hilmar, Yadira Guevara-Prip, Sylvia Hoeks, Christian Camargo.

Apple premiered “See” today at the Regency Village Theater in Los Angeles, California. Written and created by Steven Knight and directed by Francis Lawrence, “See” takes place in the distant future, after a deadly virus decimated humankind. Those who survived emerged blind. Jason Momoa stars as Baba Voss — the father of twins born centuries later with the mythic ability to see — who must protect his tribe against a powerful yet desperate queen who wants the twins destroyed. Alfre Woodard stars as Paris, Baba Voss’s spiritual leader.“See” features an incredible cast and crew, many of whom are blind or have low vision, who helped bring this epic story to life.Beginning November 1, the first three episodes of “See” will be available to watch on Apple TV+ in over 100 countries and regions around the world. New episodes will continue to roll out weekly, every Friday.

Jason Momoa at the “See” premiere.
Jason Momoa at the premiere of “See,” coming to Apple TV+ November 1.
Alfre Woodard at the “See” premiere.
Alfre Woodard at the premiere for “See” in Los Angeles, California.
“See” production team at the premiere in Los Angeles, California.
Executive producers Jon Steinberg, Joe Strechay, Dan Shotz, Peter Chernin, Jenno Topping, Steven Knight and Francis Lawrence share a moment at the premiere of “See,” coming to Apple TV+ November 1.
Hera Hilmar at the “See” premiere.
Hera Hilmar arrives at the premiere of “See” in Los Angeles, California.
Nesta Cooper at the “See” premiere.
Nesta Cooper at the premiere of “See,” coming to Apple TV+ November 1.
Yadira Guevara-Prip at the “See” premiere.
Yadira Guevara-Prip at the premiere of “See” in Los Angeles, California.
Marilee Talkington at the “See” premiere.
Marilee Talkington at the premiere of “See.”
Sylvia Hoeks at the “See” premiere.
Sylvia Hoeks at the premiere of “See,” coming to Apple TV+ November 1.

Apple TV+, the first all-original video subscription service and home for today’s most imaginative storytellers, will launch November 1 in over 100 countries and regions. The service will be available on the Apple TV app on iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, iPod touch, Mac and other platforms, including online (tv.apple.com), for AED 19.99 per month with a seven-day free trial. Customers who purchase any new iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Mac or iPod touch starting September 10, 2019, can enjoy one year of Apple TV+ for free.1 Beginning November 1, customers can initiate the one-year free offer in the Apple TV app on the device running the latest software. 

Ajman Bank Wins GCC’s Best Brand Citation Award

Ajman Bank has been declared the winner of GCC’s Best Brand Citation Award by CMO Global. Endorsed by World Federation of Marketing Professionals, World Sustainability and World CSR Day, the prestigious accolade seeks to identify and celebrate outstanding brand building and marketing by organisations, individuals and teams from across the region. The award was presented to Ms Maryam Al Shorafa, the Vice President and Head of Marketing and Corporate Communications for Ajman Bank, at a gala ceremony held at The Address Dubai Mall, Dubai.

Mr. Mohamed Amiri, Chief Executive Officer, Ajman Bank, said, “We are honoured to receive this distinguished award that benchmarks ingenuity and excellence while celebrating professionals that make a real difference in our industry. With an outstanding all-round experience, Maryam represents the successful leadership model at Ajman Bank who has been playing an instrumental role in supporting the bank’s vision and long-term growth through her strategic marketing perspective and innovative policy acumen in the most critical areas”.

Accepting the award, Ms Maryam, stated, “I am really honoured to receive this prestigious award and would like to share it with all my team members. I would also like to take this opportunity to thank our entire management who have been extremely supportive at every step of our journey. The scale of transformation sweeping the marketing sector is truly remarkable. Technological innovation and digitalisation are creating major disruption in our industry and it is exciting to continue building on our success. Awards such as this motive us to do better.”

The purpose behind the awards is to foster innovative marketing practices in the GCC as well as recognize those brands and marketers who have achieved extraordinary success. The winners are chosen for marketing excellence based on consumer preference supported by an independent academic council.

As a member of the executive committee, Ms Maryam is responsible for the strategic market positioning of Ajman Bank and leads the enterprise-wide brand and media strategy for both consumer and commercial products and services. In addition, she overseas customer research and analytics as well as wealth management marketing programs for the organization.

About Ajman Bank
Ajman Bank is an Islamic bank with an ambitious vision based on values of integrity, trust and transparency seeks to provide a wide range of Sharia-compliant and high-quality banking services to customers from individuals, companies and government institutions across the UAE. It is also keen to be updated with the latest technology that will ensure customers a distinctive experimental banking with the revival of human touch that is lost in the modern era of banking application.

Ajman Bank is headquartered in Ajman and enjoys the strong support of the Government of Ajman and is a key pillar in the emirate’s economic development strategy. The bank continues its tireless efforts to establish a prominent position in the banking sector as a sustainable Islamic banking institution, with an emphasis on the need to achieve an optimal balance in the community and caring staff, in order to provide real value for shareholders and customers alike. For more information visit http://www.ajmanbank.ae

For media contact:

Hina Bakht
Managing Director
EVOPS Marketing & PR
Mob: 00971 50 6975146
Tel: 00971 4 566 7355
Hina.bakht@evops-pr.com
www.evops-pr.com

‘Art’ of Women Empowerment and Gender Parity

Women in Leadership (WIL) Economic Forum will bring together artworks from a diverse group of artists (men and women) in a collective exhibition dedicated to promoting a gender-balanced world

Women in Leadership (WIL) Economic Forum will provide a platform to a group of local artists to showcase their works in a collective art exhibition dedicated to promoting a gender-balanced world. The 2-day show will run parallel to the conference at the Address Sky View Hotel Dubai on 28and 29 October and is being supported by 2XL Furniture & Home Décor and Art4You Gallery.

Jesno Jackson, Art4you Gallery Founder and Curator said, “When it comes to art, it is still very much a man’s world. We are proud to be part of the WIL Economic Forum. In the UAE one can discover and connect with diverse cultures and people. Each one having a different and unique voice. When we explore and engage with different cultures and gender through art, we learn something not only about the artist but also about ourselves. 11 artists from 10 nationalities have captured the need for women empowerment and gender parity connecting to this year’s theme of WIL Economic Forum – ‘Dare to build a better future’.

Amit Yadav, Head of Marketing, 2XL Furniture & Home Décor, said, “We are proud to partner with the WIL Economic Forum that will allow us to place 2XL’s unique products at this exclusive platform as well as showcase diversity of expressions through this beautiful art exhibition. At 2XL we are committed to building a gender-balanced organization. Diversity, inclusion and empowerment of women are at the heart of our business strategy and it is wonderful to see the growing role of women in the region.”

Emirati artist Ahmed Rukni Al Awadhi said, “Emirati women have been one of the cornerstones of the nation’s development since it was founded in 1971. I would like to celebrate and pay tribute to the legacy of ‘the man who was instrumental to women’s education and empowerment’ by showcasing my work ‘Remembering Sheikh Zayed: The man who built the UAE’”.

Egyptian artist Yasmine Mohamed has named her painting ‘Empowerment’. Elaborating on the idea behind her work, she said, “Empowerment of women is absolutely critical for a balanced socio-economic development. Social, cultural and family pressures on women are often the reasons behind gender inequality. Such pressures lower down the career ambitions of women.”

Peter Farrington from Canada wishes to convey the idea behind changing energies with his work ‘The Winds of Change’. He said, “The energies on the planet are shifting. Raising our level of consciousness, helping us to connect with our divine feminine energies. Embracing and uplifting these energies to the same level an in balance with our masculine energies is essential for a balanced and prosperous future on the planet for all life. The ‘dare’ then is to make way for and allow for this energy.”

Talking about the inspiration behind her painting ‘Floral’, Lebanese artist Nada Al Barazi said, “Just like flowers, strong women convey a sense of admiration. My objective is to show the beauty of nature by using vibrant colours and grow it instead of destroying it. I’m part of nature and nature is part of me that’s why I show my love to it an most of my artworks.”

Indian artist Shobha Iyer wants to convey a bold message through her painting ‘Fearless’. She stressed, “My painting is all about a fearless woman. Don’t hesitate to chase after the things that set your soul on fire. She who dares wins!”

Lindi Badenhorst who has recently moved to the UAE, is participating in the show with her work ‘Growing with the Flow’. Speaking about the inspiration behind it she said, “Having moved to the UAE in December 2018 I have learnt so much about myself as an independent woman thrown into the deep end of starting of a new life, leaving my job security and all support systems behind in South Africa. On this new adventure I have learnt about unity and support amongst the women living here. My work is an exploration of the relationship between different hues of blue and the composed layers gathering in an ocean of new adventures and cultures. It represents depth, expansiveness, imagination and change. What starts out as a yearning for a new self- expression in art, soon becomes a festival of powerful layers and intensities. The colour-scapes are constructed in an intuitive manner. Initial subtle layers of colour lead to responses that develop by adding layer upon layer to create depth and textural delight. My work is driven by my perception of emotions, moods, and inspirational moments in my everyday life.

List of Participating Artists at the WIL Economic Forum:

  1. Jesno Jackson from India
  2. Ahmed Rukni Al Awadhi from the UAE
  3. Nevine Meguid from Australia
  4. Nada Al Barazi from Lebanon
  5. Yasmine Mohamed from Egypt
  6. Shobha Iyer from India
  7. Lindi Badenhorst from South Africa
  8. Shabnam Habib from Pakistan
  9. Sanja Jankovic from Servia
  10. Nadeem Yaqoob Albeloushi from Iran
  11. Peter Farrington from Canada

Women in Leadership (WIL) Economic Forum by Naseba, the largest female economic empowerment platform in the Middle East will gather some of the leading regional and international organisations such as Siemens, Facebook, Allergan, FedEx, Philip Morris, PWC, General Motors and Emaar Hospitality, to share their success stories on gender parity and inclusion. The forum will take place in Dubai on October 28 and 29 at the Address Sky View Hotel Dubai and is supported by Chain Reaction and CCM as well as 2XL Furniture & Home Décor that will be creating inspiring stage settings for engaging discussions.

About Naseba 
Naseba creates growth opportunities, connecting people, partners and ideas. Focused on deal facilitation, it helps clients raise capital, close sales, enter new markets, secure partners and educate workforces. Naseba creates opportunity and adds economic value at every stage of our client’s journey. 

Since 2002, Naseba has facilitated more than a billion dollars’ worth of deals and has connected over 100,000 global executives through more than 1,000 proprietary business platforms in liquid growth markets. 

Naseba is a signatory of the Women’s Empowerment Principles – Equality Means Business, produced and disseminated by the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) and the United Nations Global Compact. 

For media contact: 

Hina Bakht 
Managing Director 
EVOPS Marketing & PR 
Mob: 00971 50 6975146 
Tel: 00971 4 566 7355 
Hina.bakht@evops-pr.com 
www.evops-pr.com 

What makes Millennium Plaza Dubai Unique

Millennium Plaza Dubai is a luxurious 5-star enjoying an unrivalled location in the heart of the emirate facing Dubai International Financial Centre. Within a few minutes’ drive from the hotel are Dubai International Convention and Exhibition Centre, Dubai Mall and the World Trade Centre. Direct access to Emirates Towers Metro Station makes travelling within Dubai extremely convenient. The 65-storey tower offers a choice of 401 spacious guest rooms with stunning views overlooking Zabeel Palace and Jumeirah Beach. Included in its facilities are superb business and leisure venues including 11 modern meeting rooms, state-of-the-art business centre, health club and spa, Sky Lounge, and an infinity swimming pool and children’s pool with views of the Arabian Sea. Economist Dubai in conversation with Mr. Fadi Ammache, General Manager of Millennium Plaza Dubai

Al Tamimi & Company to host high level event celebrating Bahrain’s burgeoning FinTech ecosystem and the firm’s 5th anniversary in the Kingdom

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Manama, 22 October 2019: Al Tamimi & Company, the largest law firm in the Middle East, is gearing up to host an event on 30th October 2019 to celebrate its 5th anniversary of operations in the Kingdom of Bahrain. To mark the occasion, more than 100 clients and business leaders are set to gather at the Four Seasons Hotel, Bahrain Bay, where they will enjoy a reception and provoking panel discussion with thought leaders on Bahrain’s growing position as a regional FinTech hub.

Since its establishment in Bahrain in 2014, and 30 years of operating in the region also being celebrated this year, Al Tamimi & Company has built a reputation for helping clients navigate and stay at the forefront of business, regulatory and legal developments that impact organisations across industry sectors. With FinTech and digital transformation more broadly now occupying an important part of corporate agendas in Bahrain, the panel discussion will address the following themes: – “How has Bahrain positioned itself as a hub for FinTech”, “Has Bahrain reached the objectives it set out to achieve in the FinTech space” and “Horizon scanning: What does the future of FinTech look like in Bahrain and what are our predictions”.

Taking part on the panel are: Mr. Khalid Saad, CEO, FinTech Bay, Mr. Shiraz Ali, CEO, Finzo, Mr. Gaby El Hakim, Chief Legal Officer, National Bank of Bahrain and Mr. Haroun Khwaja, Senior Associate, Technology Media & Telecommunications, Al Tamimi & Company. The session will be moderated by Mr. Geoff Cooke of Oxford Business Group.

Ms. Foutoun Hajjar, Partner, Head of Office-Bahrain at Al Tamimi & Company, said: “In light of our role as early supporters and advisors to FinTech start-ups in Bahrain, and our mission to be the leading regional law firm for innovation and technology, we’re delighted to mark our 5th anniversary of operations in the Kingdom with this event celebrating the strong partnerships we have established with a diverse group of stakeholders in Bahrain’s rapidly developing FinTech and digital ecosystem. Innovation is driving major change and positive disruption across industries and we intend to continue acting as a trusted advisor and go-to-legal firm in this space. In doing so, we have established a number of platforms to support technology focused companies of all sizes including providing start-ups with legal clinics and training so that they can continue to establish and grow in Bahrain and, in turn, support the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 goals and ambitions in FinTech leadership. We look forward to welcoming our clients and many of our partners at this event and to celebrating our Firm’s and the continued success of Bahraini business in FinTech and beyond.”

Al Tamimi & Company is one of the fastest growing full service law firms in Bahrain with a comprehensive offering spanning Litigation, Corporate Commercial, Corporate Structuring, IP and Banking & Finance teams on the ground.  Building on the Firm’s strong track record established over the past thirty years, it looks to further augment growth by developing new practice groups in the Bahrain office  and growing existing ones including the further expansion of its Technology, Media and Telecommunications (TMT) practice. Other key initiatives of the Firm  include the establishment of an Innovation and Efficiency Group (IEG), chaired by Ms. Hajjar. The IEG Group has been created to bring together innovation-focused lawyers and business services staff to help drive a culture of change within the Firm in line with the technological changes taking place across its  clients’ organisations. The IEG Group focuses on internal innovation, external innovation and supporting the regional Governments in achieving innovation goals. In recognition of the significant strides the Firm has taken in this space, Al Tamimi & Company recently won the prestigious International Law Firms Review award for the most Innovative Law Firm in the UAE.

Silk ‘n’ Spice Restaurant Launch at Millennium Airport Hotel Dubai

Silk ‘n’ Spice, the outstanding Indian restaurant at the Millennium Airport Hotel Dubai, celebrated its launch earlier this week with a beautiful evening. On offer was a culinary fusion of delicious flavours from East to West. Here’s an exclusive report by Economist Dubai…

Women in Leadership (WIL) Economic Forum Partners with WOW (World of Women) Film Fair Middle East

Two special screenings of short films about Relationships and Identity, will put the focus on diversity of expressions

Discussions on gender equality in the film industry have gained increasing momentum recently. The World of Women’s Cinema – WOW Film Fair Middle East, now in its 7th year in Dubai, will be part of the programme of the Women in Leadership Economic Forum (WIL) being held at the Address Sky View Hotel Dubai on 28and 29 October.

WOW Film Fair Middle East is the first women’s short film fair that promotes and awards the talents of women directors, producers, writers, editors and cinematographers in the film industry internationally. During the event, exclusive screenings featuring a collection of short award-winning films will be on display. Most of the winning films from 2019 are based around relationships and the feminine identity.

Sophie Le Ray, CEO of Naseba, said, “Cinema is a powerful medium with the power to reflect and shape culture. We need more women in the film industry and to increase female worldviews through documentaries and featured films. By collaborating with WOW Film Fair Middle East, our goal is to spark conversations that matter about gender stereotyping in the industry, showcase and celebrate some of the exceptional work done by both female and male filmmakers to address the gender divide.”

Founder of WOW Film Festival and TV Presenter, Hermoine Macura-Noble explains why they are partnering with WIL 2019. “It is an event that offers high performing men and women to ‘see the world through the eyes of women.’ WIL 2019 is also a great platform for men and women in the arts to build their network and explore further opportunities to share their work with the world. Our 2019 film winners were chosen from over 300 entries and feature films that focus on women or are about women.”

List of Films to be screened at WIL Economic Forum:

RELATIONSHIPS

LIGHTNING
Duration: 18 minutes
Director: Cristina Isoli, UK
A love story about a deaf girl and a new guy in town who pursues her romantically.

DRIVING MS. SAUDI
Duration: 2 minutes.
Director: Walid Chaya
A film about a mother and son and how he encourages her to drive.

MY HEART, HER BODY
Duration: 6 minutes.
Director: Fatma Alhameli, UAE
A film about the complications of love in the GCC.

CRUSH HOUR
Duration: 7 minutes.
Director: Natalie Malla, UK
Melissa and Eric might just be soulmates, but will they talk to each other or will they leave that crowded tube carriage never knowing what might have been?

IDENTITY

SUPERMARKET
Duration : 14 minutes.
Director: Rhonda Mitrani, USA
A film about a woman trapped in a supermarket with other woman in various stages of womanhood.

SOULALA
Duration: 10 minutes.
Director: Maha Moussa, UAE
A short documentary about a Syrian refugee contemporary dancer, that had to start her life twice because of the Syrian war.

FAREED
Duration: 11 minutes.
Director: Rudy Barichello, Canada
Fareed is a sensitive and discreet poet; whose passion is calligraphy. He is a young man of Berber origin who has a sewing workshop in his apartment in Montreal. The news media is dominated by stories about violence and barbaric acts done in the name of Islam. At first, Fareed doesn’t react at the accusing finger pointed at all Muslims. But his friends at the Kahwa Café have a different opinion.

UNVEIL
Duration: 19 minutes.
Director: Joy Ernanny, Brazil
A film about women who find comfort in a beauty salon for women only.

DISPLACED
Duration: 11 minutes.
Director: Mojdeh Ghanbari, France
A film about a female boxer and her dream to be a professional and how her dad disapproves.

HUMAN RIGHTS

PERMISSION
Duration: 6 minutes.

Director: Kaye Tuckerman, USA
The end of 2017 presents a new awakening in the acceptance of sexual harassment and abuse allegations in the home, arts, media and politics. Choreographer Ari Groover, wanted to explore the long term effects of this abuse on both women and men, victim and perpetrator, and that culture that allows powerful individuals to abuse that power sexually, and remain unaccountable. In this story guilt plays an important part, especially when this guilt attacks the abuser’s conscience, and holds the individual accountable for their own actions.

Nice 14/07/2016

Duration: 2 minutes.

Director: Gisele Nour, Australia 
Based on the 2016 terror attack in Nice, France, this autobiographical-inspired animated short film explores the immediacy and shock of violence, and its conversely lingering impact. Employing a range of handmade, tactile materials and an experimental structure, this narrative is a glimpse into the disparity between a holiday and a haunting.

Women in Leadership Economic Forum (WIL) by Naseba, the largest female economic empowerment platform in the Middle East will gather some of the leading regional and international organisations such as Siemens, Facebook, Allergan, FedEx, Philip Morris, PWC, General Motors and Emaar Hospitality, to share their success stories on gender parity and inclusion. The forum will take place in Dubai on October 28 and 29 at the Address Sky View Hotel Dubai and is supported by Chain Reaction and CCM as well as 2XL Furniture & Home Décor that will be creating inspiring stage settings for engaging discussions.

About Naseba 
Naseba creates growth opportunities, connecting people, partners and ideas. Focused on deal facilitation, it helps clients raise capital, close sales, enter new markets, secure partners and educate workforces. Naseba creates opportunity and adds economic value at every stage of our client’s journey. 

Since 2002, Naseba has facilitated more than a billion dollars’ worth of deals and has connected over 100,000 global executives through more than 1,000 proprietary business platforms in liquid growth markets. 

Naseba is a signatory of the Women’s Empowerment Principles – Equality Means Business, produced and disseminated by the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) and the United Nations Global Compact. 

For media contact: 

Hina Bakht 
Managing Director 
EVOPS Marketing & PR 
Mob: 00971 50 6975146 
Tel: 00971 4 566 7355 
Hina.bakht@evops-pr.com 
www.evops-pr.com 

Gender Parity and Women Economic Empowerment on the Rise in the Middle East with UAE at the Forefront

Women are driving positive change in the Middle East and the United Arab Emirates continues to be at the forefront of this progress offering greater opportunities to women to achieve their full economic, political and social potential in keeping with the country’s goal to be one of the world’s top 25 countries for gender equality by 2021. The emirates has closed 64% of its overall gender gap. Women in Leadership Economic Forum (WIL) by Naseba, the largest female economic empowerment platform in the Middle East will gather some of the leading regional and international organisations such as Siemens, Facebook, Allergan, FedEx, Philip Morris, PWC, General Motors and Emaar Hospitality, to share their success stories and strategies on closing the gender gap as they ‘Dare to Build a Better Future’.

According to industry reports organizations where women hold nearly 30% of leadership positions could add up to 6% to their net margins.

Hani Ashkar, PwC Middle East Senior Partner, said, “Diversity is integral to business sustainability and overall success. Boosting the number of women in work is not just a moral imperative but also has a measurable impact on the bottom line. At PwC Middle East, we recognise that diversity and inclusion are multifaceted and that we need to tackle these challenges holistically. To do this, we believe we also need to honestly address head-on the concerns and needs of our diverse employees and increase equity for all. This is not a one-size-fits-all for our offices around the region, but we are working to drive this through targets and data-centric accountability, in order to be fit for the future and to continue to make a difference in our region.”

The MEA region has been a development platform at Siemens for many high potential females who developed into key global leadership roles after their assignment with the company.

Eva Mourino, SVP HR Siemens Middle East, said: “I am always surprised that whenever we talk about gender parity, we mention specific metrics, like increasing net margins or boosting profit, to justify the cause. Why do we need to provide proof to explain that more leadership positions should be held by women? Women deserve a place at the table. At Siemens we believe that diversity on all levels of the organisation contributes to the overall success of the company.”

Philip Morris International (PMI) is in the midst of a massive business transformation to create a smoke-free future. To succeed, the company is developing better, scientifically-substantiated smoke-free alternatives for the millions of adult smokers who would otherwise continue to smoke, to replace cigarettes as quickly as possible.

“To accomplish this vision, PMI is becoming a more agile, inclusive and gender-balanced workplace. We need a work environment that is inclusive so everyone can thrive, and a culture that is welcoming of different individuals with diverse skills, perspectives and ways of thinking so we can unlock the innovation and creativity needed to completely transform our business”, said Melissa Whiting, Vice President Inclusion & Diversity at PMI.

Today, women hold just under 36% of management roles across PMI, up six percentage points since 2014.

Highlighting steps the company has taken to make progress within this timeframe, Whiting commented, “At PMI, we started by making progress on gender balance a business priority, with clear commitment from the top. We have set ourselves a target to improve the representation of women in management across PMI to at least 40% by 2022 and we regularly track and report on progress. In the UAE, we have seen positive results in our Middle East organization where the representation of women in our Leadership Team has increased by 30% in the last four years. And senior leaders are increasingly taking time to coach and mentor female talent, supporting them in their career development. This is especially important in the UAE, given the country’s vision to become one of the world’s top 25 countries for gender equality by 2021.”

Women currently make up 35% of the GM Middle East (GM MEO) workforce, a significant increase from the 26% just over five years ago. In the past two years alone, nearly 50% of the total new hires at the company were female, with different education backgrounds including STEM fields

John Roth, President and Managing Director of GM Africa and Middle East, said, “At General Motors, we know that inclusivity is a vital element to driving success and retaining exceptional talent that makes those business goals possible.

He added: “Our commitment to diversity and inclusion at GM aligns with the UAE’s goals for gender balance, as part of Vision 2021. It sits at the core of our business approach, raising diverse perspectives across our teams and ensuring everyone has the opportunity to grow and create impact.”

Women in Leadership Economic Forum (WIL) by Naseba, will take place in Dubai on October 28 and 29 at the Address Sky View Hotel Dubai.  It is supported by Chain Reaction and CCM as well as 2XL Furniture & Home Décor that will be creating inspiring stage settings for engaging discussions.

About Naseba 
Naseba creates growth opportunities, connecting people, partners and ideas. Focused on deal facilitation, it helps clients raise capital, close sales, enter new markets, secure partners and educate workforces. Naseba creates opportunity and adds economic value at every stage of our client’s journey. 

Since 2002, Naseba has facilitated more than a billion dollars’ worth of deals and has connected over 100,000 global executives through more than 1,000 proprietary business platforms in liquid growth markets. 

Naseba is a signatory of the Women’s Empowerment Principles – Equality Means Business, produced and disseminated by the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) and the United Nations Global Compact. 

For media contact: 

Hina Bakht 
Managing Director 
EVOPS Marketing & PR 
Mob: 00971 50 6975146 
Tel: 00971 4 566 7355 
Hina.bakht@evops-pr.com 
www.evops-pr.com 

PEOPLE OF DETERMINATION ENTER MEDIA INDUSTRY IN UAE

Ayesha Naseem, Anchor High Point Education meets up with Bilal Hafeez, Brendyn Monsorate & Christopher Swaminathan. People of determination from Al Noor training center as the trio from the first batch of special needs correspondents in the UAE.