Showing posts with label IOL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IOL. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Introducing OnIslam.net

It has been a while since I posted anything about the crisis at IslamOnline.net (IOL). Nearly seven months after IOL was suddenly taken over by a new Qatar-based administration bent on changing the site's mission and vision, the English-language portion of the site no longer exists.

Let that sink in for a moment.

Anyone familiar with IOL knows what a huge resource IOL was to English-speaking Muslims around the world. The site contained thousands of pages of content on every conceivable topic and was a great source for news, scholarly opinions and inspiration. It was one of the few Islamic websites to do real reporting in the fields of health and science and cover important topics like Gaza that were being ignored by major media outlets. It was also a reliable source of information for non-Muslims wanting to learn more about Islam. IOL employed more than 250 people and worked with freelancers everywhere. Losing IOL has been a bit like losing a very good friend.

There is some good news to report, however. The whole time this crisis has been going on, the editorial team that founded IOL ten years ago has been working hard behind the scenes to create a new site that is very similar to the old one.

OnIslam.net was officially launched on October 9, 2010 and looks like it is off to a very good start. This time around, the editorial work will be separate from the funding, allowing the site to flourish as intended.

Many of IOL's old articles (no longer available at the old site) can be found at OnIslam.

As of now, I do not know if OnIslam is a paying market and how the rates will compare to those previously offered by IOL. Let's pray that the site receives the funding and support needed to continue this beneficial project.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

IOL - More Analysis

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Situation at IOL Still Unclear

Despite this statement from IOL workers, the situation at IslamOnline.net remains unclear. Reports published yesterday indicated that Qatar's Minister of Social Affairs had ousted Sheikh Youssef el-Qaradawi from his position as head of the Qatari Al-Balagh Soceity, which owns the website, and that the Cairo office is already making plans for a new site.

Meanwhile, Nadia El-Awady, who used to work with IOL as a journalist and editor, invited journalists throughout Egypt to show solidarity with IOL strikers by visiting IOL's office on Thursday afternoon in 6th of October City.

More on the crisis at IOL

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

IslamOnline - What's Happening Online

This article highlights some of the effects the IOL takeover has had on the website itself:
  • Many old reports have been re-published, while newer reports have disappeared. 
  • Entire sections and links have been removed from the Arabic-language portal including the "News and Analysis" section and the "Islamyioun" website link. A special page on Al-Quds (Jerusalem) has also disappeared. 
  • No articles have been published in English since the crisis erupted last week. 
  • In addition, all the English-language content Cairo editors published during the first two weeks of March has disappeared.
  • "Gaza Holocaust," a special page dedicated to revealing the Israeli army’s crimes in the Gaza war, has also vanished. 
  • Pageviews are estimated at 60 percent down, from 200,000 pageviews per day to just 86,000.
More on the crisis at IOL

IOL: The Waiting Game

Things are still uncertain at IslamOnline.net (IOL), with two possible outcomes:

1. A severance agreement that results in almost all employees of the site’s Cairo newsroom resigning and the 10-year-old website starting over, or:

2. The issues between Qatar and Cairo are resolved, and the site returns to normal.

According to Al-Masry Al-Youm, Sheikh Youssef el-Qaradawi, who helped found the site, "recently broke a week-long silence on the issue, seemingly siding with the employees. On a Sunday broadcast of his Al Jazeera Channel show Sharia and Life, Qarawai said, the site may be temporarily 'kidnapped,' but ultimately, 'the site must return to its family.'"

An IOL editor whom I occasionally work with says that the mood is still hopeful, and that patience from the site's freelancers is appreciated while the situation is resolved.

More on the crisis at IOL

Monday, March 22, 2010

The Latest on IOL

While an article published on March 17 by Al-Masry Al-Youm contained hopeful news about the crisis at IslamOnline.net (IOL), a new article published yesterday indicated that striking workers were still in limbo.

It seems that two board members in Qatar have been suspended for their role in shutting down the Cairo office but are refusing to relinquish the passwords needed to access the website's servers.

More on the crisis at IOL

Friday, March 19, 2010

Bibi-Aisha Speaks Out

More from Bibi-Aisha Wadvalla (head of IOL Radio):

Why We're on Strike at IslamOnline

More on the crisis at IOL