Ameen Mohamed Habla

Perhaps those who are in charge of the Infographic account on Twitter - who are chanting on a plane that is about to break down on one of Canada's towers - may not be able to pass from an unsuccessful advertisement to international news that puts the same Infographic account in front of newspapers and websites.

The account has been looking for fame for a while, but this time it has a surplus in terms of which it does not want and does not want to.

The twinkle - part of the account's contribution to Saudi Arabia's campaign against Canada - shows a Canadian civil aircraft with the Canadian Airways logo about to hit the CN Tower in Toronto with a commentary that would remind the Arab example of "interference with what the hearing does not mean What does not satisfy him. "

The comments came in the context of angry Saudi reactions after Canadian Foreign Minister Christia Freeland and the embassy in Riyadh expressed deep concern about the arrest of activist authorities Samar Badawi and other activists from civil society and women's rights.

Apology and closure
Immediately, the account apologized for the tweet and deleted it, and then closed the account by order of the Ministry of Information for "publishing a tweet violation" and received several complaints, according to a statement to the ministry.

The Western media and the means of communication were rife with talk about the implications and consequences of drawing (social communication)

But the deletion of the twinkle and apologize for it and the closure of the account did not stop the wide luster raised by the infographic after it spread like wildfire in the Arab and the world, and its impact was more difficult and harder in the United States and in the West in general, recalling the bitterness of September 11, 2011 and his painful memory, The scenario that appeared in the epigraphic quiz is very similar to the September 11 scenario: a civilian aircraft flying over a crowded city sky, heading towards the Samak Tower in a loaded context.

Business Insider reports that Saudi Arabia's Infograve is an official site and that the kingdom is threatening Canada with attacks similar to the September 11 attacks in the context of a human rights dispute. Its readers said 15 of the hijackers were Saudis.

The picture, shown by a Canadian Airways flight on the horizon of Toronto, attracted criticism shortly after its publication. Some saw this as a subtle reference to the September attacks.

The British newspaper said the attacks killed 2,996 people after 19 hijackers hit the World Trade Center and Pentagon towers and also said 15 of the hijackers were Saudi nationals.

The same content has been repeated in a large number of Western newspapers and accounts of social networking activists in large parts of the world.

Damages and consequences
Many Arab devotees spoke of the damage this publication would cause, especially since Riyadh suffered greatly from attempts by American and Western circles to blame the September attacks for it, and spent a lot of money and means and effort to keep it away.

Some writers and gamblers stopped at some risk and the repercussions of the twinkle, giving another chance for those seeking to link Saudi Arabia to the September attacks to strengthen their position and justify their accusations in some Western circles that do not retain much friendliness to the kingdom.

Some of the recalcitrant warned of the dangers of Canada's resort to legal escalation after the publication of "

In addition, some cautioned against the danger that Canada would resort to other scenarios to respond to the fee, especially with regard to any possible legal escalation, in the wake of the lawsuits filed against Riyadh in the United States and after the Justa Act, which provided an opportunity to hold Saudi Arabia accountable to the US judiciary.

"The global media today speak in one direction towards the hints of #infrographic Saudi Arabia's account of bombings in Canada as the events of September, and the expectations of a Canadian diplomatic and legal escalation in this regard," said writer Ihsan al-Faqih.
Whoever drowns the ship, but those who took over the scene have fallen and become ministers and advisers without moral or academic merit. "

"Those who fear the interests of the kingdom do not publish a fee for a plane heading towards a skyscraper, that's ignorance, they woke up a beast that was asleep," said Mughara and journalist Wajid Waqfi in Tijayda.

One of the assassins said that Saudi Arabia's Infograve account had committed a diplomatic crime against his country, and that "the impact and impact of that twinge is equal to the loss of a diplomatic battle." Using a plane image with an Arab example "interferes with what it does not mean it does not satisfy" Only a threat of an attack by the airliner.

A number of Saudi recruits defended the account, and some said he had made no mistake. He was referring to the Canadian ambassador's expulsion and return to Canada via a Canadian plane.

Among those who defended the situation and the twinge of the view that the error is not in the same joke, but in the deletion and apologize for it as if the owners were guilty, which reinforced the interpretations and interpretations of the popular tweet.

One of the Saudi accounts said that "the survey of the tweet is unfortunately a mistake and an unwise decision because it proved an analysis of the misunderstanding of the meaning ... the intention is clear, the ambassador made a mistake and intervened in what he does not care about, and we returned him on the first flight to his country." The courage is to stand up, .

Whose account?
Many Western media described the Infographic account as the official account, and many Moroccans confirmed its dependence on the Royal Court. However, the Saudi Ministry of Information and Culture hinted that it was a personal account, and said after the outbreak of the infographic crisis that the person in charge had been contacted until the investigation was over.

It is noted that many Saudi semi-official positions and accounts have repeatedly praised the account and recommended its follow-up, including the account of the adviser at the Royal Court, Saud al-Qahtani, who praised the account and those who described it as young people.

A number of recruits talked about the dependency of the account to the official Saudi circles (social communication)

The account was also known for adopting and defending official positions among thousands of accounts that represent media tools to rally support for Saudi Arabia's official view, regardless of its actual dependency.

In its new era, the Saudi account of "modernity" and the cost of hundreds of billions to erase the image and impact of the events of September 11 from the mirror seen by the West in Riyadh would not have taken it to the same square as it had fled to the West. But the winds of Infogravik come from the yachts of Ben Salman.