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Sunday, January 25, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "telecommunications" (4 articles)

Mansoor Rashid al-Khater
Business

QFC appoints Mansoor Rashid al-Khater as CEO

The Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) has appointed Mansoor Rashid al-Khater as chief executive officer, effective from Sunday, succeeding Yousuf Mohamed al-Jaida.Al-Khater brings over 28 years of experience and strong strategic insight to the QFC. In his new role, he will lead the organisation in delivering its strategic objectives and further strengthening its position as a trusted and credible international financial centre.He will oversee the centre’s mandate, with a focus on ensuring its strategic objectives remain aligned with the Qatar National Vision 2030, contributing to the broader national economic ecosystem and supporting economic diversification efforts.Drawing on his extensive experience, he will work with the executive management team to drive the QFC’s strategic priorities across financial services development, wealth attraction, and digital transformation. This will further position the QFC and Qatar as a preferred destination for business growth.Al-Khater has held a number of senior leadership positions across the telecommunications and energy sectors. Most recently, he served as chief executive officer of Ooredoo Tunisia. During this period, he led a company-wide transformation and drove key performance achievements and operational progress.Prior to this, he held various senior roles within the Ooredoo Group. Before joining Ooredoo, he spent 11 years at Qatar Petroleum (now QatarEnergy). In addition, al-Khater currently serves on the board of directors of Ooredoo Algeria. He has previously served as a board member of Arabsat, Al Jazeera Network, and the Qatar Museums Authority Board of Trustees, reflecting his extensive governance and board-level experience.He holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Qatar University, an MBA from Hull University and a master’s degree in Emergency and Disaster Management from Georgetown University. 

Seized vessel Fitburg rests in harbour in Kirkkonummi, Finland. – Reuters
International

Ship seized in Finland carried EU-sanctioned Russian steel

A vessel seized in Finland suspected of damaging a telecommunications cable between Helsinki and Tallinn was transporting Russian steel targeted by European Union sanctions, Finnish Customs said Thursday. On Wednesday Finnish police detained the Fitburg, a 132m-long cargo ship en route from St Petersburg, Russia, to Haifa, Israel, and its 14 crew members following suspicion the ship’s anchor had damaged the subsea telecoms cable in the Gulf of Finland. “Preliminary information indicated that the cargo consisted of steel products originating in Russia, which are subject to extensive sanctions imposed on Russia,” Finnish Customs said in a statement. The agency therefore carried out an inspection of the ship’s cargo late on Wednesday. “According to the assessment of experts at Finnish Customs, the structural steel in question falls under the EU’s sectoral sanctions,” it said. “Import of such sanctioned goods into the EU is prohibited under EU sanctions regulations.” Finnish Customs said it was still investigating “the applicability of EU sanctions legislation to this case”. The steel remained impounded pending clarification, it said, and Finnish Customs has opened a preliminary inquiry “with a view to launching a pre-trial investigation into a potential sanctions violation”. Finnish police said on Wednesday that they were investigating the damaged cable incident as “aggravated criminal damage, attempted aggravated criminal damage, and aggravated interference with telecommunications”. The Fitburg (pictured) is flagged from St Vincent and Grenadines, and its 14 crew members – from Russia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan – were detained by Finnish police. Two of the crew members were placed under arrest Thursday and two others were placed under a travel ban, police said, refusing to disclose their nationalities or roles in the crew. Energy and communications infrastructure, including underwater cables and pipelines, have been damaged in the Baltic Sea in recent years. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, many experts and political leaders have viewed the suspected cable sabotage as part of a “hybrid war” carried out by Russia against Western countries. EU foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas said Thursday that Europe “remains vigilant” as its critical infrastructure was “at high risk of sabotage”. “The EU will continue to fortify its critical infrastructure, including by investing in new cables, strengthening surveillance, ensuring more repair capacity, and moving against Moscow’s shadow fleet, which also acts as a launchpad for hybrid attacks,” she wrote on X. The cable damaged on Wednesday is owned by Finnish telecoms group Elisa and located in Estonia’s exclusive economic zone. 

Under the oversight of Acting Chief Administrative officer Abdulla A al-Misnad, and Chief Technology officer Ramy Boctor, the visit included briefings with field teams and reviews of critical controls for work at height, lifting operations, electrical isolation, RF exposure, permit-to-work processes, and checks on emergency preparedness.
Qatar

Vodafone Qatar executive team visit network sites to promote safety

In line with Vodafone Qatar’s commitment to health and safety, its executive team recently visited two key telecommunications network sites.Under the oversight of Acting Chief Administrative Officer Abdulla A al-Misnad and Chief Technology Officer Ramy Boctor, the visit included briefings with field teams and reviews of critical controls for work at height, lifting operations, electrical isolation, RF exposure, permit-to-work processes, and checks on emergency preparedness.The executives also engaged the crews on Vodafone Qatar’s ‘8 Absolute Safety Rules’ and frontline wellbeing measures, aligning with internal standards and local regulations. The visit was designed to strengthen safety culture, promote proactive hazard and near-miss reporting, and spotlight the link between safe execution and network resilience during maintenance and upgrades.Al-Misnad said, “Health, safety, and employee well-being are fundamental to how we operate at Vodafone Qatar. The performance of our network and the trust of our customers rely on work that is carried out safely, consistently, and to the highest standard.”Boctor added: “By being present on site and engaging directly with our teams, we reinforce safe behaviours, understand the support they need to work effectively, and ensure that our safety practices reflect real operational requirements. This is how we protect our people, strengthen national connectivity, and uphold the values that guide our organisation.”The tour demonstrated executive ownership of health and safety, reinforced employee wellbeing, and reaffirmed the company’s commitment to providing safe, reliable service for its customers.For more information on Vodafone Qatar’s services and solutions, visit https://www.vodafone.qa/en/business/home. 

The award underscores Ooredoo's broader strategy to invest in AI and data analytics as a core component of its mission to redefine the future of telecommunications in Qatar.
Business

Ooredoo Qatar’s AI-powered customer experience earns AI innovation award

Ooredoo Qatar has been recognised for its outstanding leadership in leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) and data science to revolutionise customer experience at ‘Teradata Possible 2025’, an AI and data conference held in the US.Ooredoo Qatar won the c in the ‘AI for Customer Experience’ category. The company’s advanced analytical capabilities and AI-powered customer engagement strategy have set a new benchmark in the telecommunications industry, earning it a top honour at the leading international AI and data conference.At the heart of Ooredoo Qatar’s achievement is its robust data ecosystem, built on Teradata Vantage Cloud and seamlessly integrated with Google Cloud Platform (GCP). By harnessing a powerful AI stack for use cases such as customer segmentation, predictive customer engagement, churn prediction, and sentiment analytics, Ooredoo Qatar has transformed its customer journeys into dynamic and personalised experiences.Ooredoo Qatar’s extensive use of data frameworks has enabled the organisation to understand its customers more deeply through behavioural analysis and to create personalised products.By operationalising AI across the organisation’s customer engagement strategy, Ooredoo Qatar continues to lead the way in delivering innovative, data-driven solutions that enhance customer satisfaction and loyalty.