• Donate
  • Login
Thursday, June 4, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
Cart / £0.00

No products in the basket.

MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result
  • Editorial
  • Explainer
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Food
  • Health
  • Science
  • Skwawkbox
  • UK

Apple Maps not featuring all of Lebanon is a ‘colonial’ act

Cameron Baillie by Cameron Baillie
15 April 2026
in Analysis, Global
Reading Time: 152 mins read
189 6
A A
3
Home Global Analysis
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on BlueskyShare via WhatsAppShare via TelegramShare on Threads

Apple Maps has drawn condemnation over its satellite software displaying vast blank areas across Lebanon and missing most Lebanese settlements.

Although apparently not a new feature, the discovery comes as Lebanon faces repeated Israeli bombings, ground invasions and an expanded genocidal assault on its civilian populations.

Apple: ‘rotten to its core’

A viral X post by American Christian “Truth Seeker”, Ethan Levins, claiming that “Apple has removed Lebanese village names in Southern Lebanon” sparked outrage.

Levins wrote:

As Israel invades, they are already setting the state to justify occupation. I’ve never seen something like this.

Apple has removed Lebanese village names in Southern Lebanon.

As Israel invades, they are already setting the state to justify occupation.

I’ve never seen something like this. pic.twitter.com/gKRcsmUjO3

— Ethan Levins 🇺🇸 (@EthanLevins2) April 12, 2026

Levins’ remarks quickly spread and were reshared, gaining more than 15 million views between just two accounts. While two substantive aspects of this story appear untrue that doesn’t mean there’s no story.

Firstly, it’s not only the south of Lebanon that’s empty on Apple Maps: none of the country’s place names appear, regardless of zoom level.

Secondly, the names of towns, villages and streets haven’t been removed recently, according to Apple. They were actually never there to begin with.

Apple never featured most of Lebanon’s villages and towns on its Maps platform, making their suspected duplicity arguably more of a structural complicity.

Zionist crimes unfold in Lebanon

The Zionist imagination of West Asian territory, dating back to long before Israel existed, was of “a land without a people [Palestine], for a people without a land [diaspora Jews]”.

Now it appears that Zionist-aligned corporations like Apple are replicating this template as another Nakba-scale event sees more than a million Lebanese people displaced, and thousands murdered by Israel since 2023.

In one of the worst atrocities committed in decades, Israeli bombings of Beirut killed more than 350 civilians in under 10 violent minutes of bloodshed. As far as Apple is concerned, they weren’t there.

Lebanese officials dubbed the massacre “Black Wednesday” and multiple human rights organisations have condemned it among many Israeli war crimes.

Now, Israeli politicians are openly stating their plans to indefinitely occupy southern Lebanon, right up to the Litani River, in yet another flagrant violation of numerous international laws.

Zionist settlers are already sharing plans, based on purported “God-given” right, to settle southern Lebanon just as they’ve violently settled Occupied Palestine, the West Bank and Syria’s Golan Heights.

Rather than removing southern Lebanese villages from Maps specifically to aid Israel’s murderous 2026 assault on the country, the US mega-corporation arguably laid the groundwork long ago.

Instead, Apple did so by deciding never to host Lebanon’s civilian life on its platform in the first place.

The Israeli settlement of Shomera has less than 500 inhabitants, it appears on Apple maps. The Lebanese town of Ayta al-Shab, 5 kilometers away, has 5000 inhabitants, it does not appear on Apple maps. https://t.co/q291kqHXCE pic.twitter.com/1vAKCH2dZG

— B.M. (@ireallyhateyou) April 12, 2026

Apple’s bullshit ‘on background’

Journalist Carole Cadwalladr, who covers US tech oligarchy extensively at the Nerve, provided a stern rebuttal to Apple’s denial of the viral online story.

Cadwalladr reached out to Apple for comment on the story. Apple offered not a quote per se, but rather an ‘on background,’ non-quotable response to the circulating story.

‘On background,’ according to Apple, means that “information is provided on a non-attributable basis and should not be directly quoted or attributed to Apple”.

Cadwalladr described this ‘on background’ method as “tech PR bullshit”.

Is Apple deleting place names from its map of southern Lebanon?

I emailed Apple to fact check this viral claim & I’m publishing its bullshit response in full as a teachable moment.

This ‘on background’ crap is how tech companies avoid accountability.
1/ https://t.co/7VRCNSNdUj pic.twitter.com/jUuO0dovN3

— Carole Cadwalladr (@carolecadwalla) April 13, 2026

‘On background,’ apparently, allows companies to launder corporate narratives through unscrupulous hacks, without journalists stating where their analysis or ideas originate.

Cadwalladr is scrupulous, however, and took the opportunity to expose Apple’s “bullshit” PR meandering with a direct screenshot of their otherwise unaccountable statement.

A screenshot of Apple's reply, which says: We'd like to share the below 'on background' response to recent reports circulating on social media and in various publications regarding the visibility of certain villages and towns in Southern Lebanon on Apple Maps. Please note that this information is provided on a non-attributable basis and should not be directly quoted or attributed to Apple. Response on background: We are aware that some outlets have incorrectly reported that certain village and town names in Lebanon were removed from Apple Maps. These locations have never been featured. The newer, more detailed Apple Maps experience is not currently available in that region. While we continue to expand where the new maps experience is available, it is not available in all regions across the globe.
From X: @carolecadwalla

Cadwalladr pointed out that Apple’s ‘non’-statement that the newest version of Apple Maps “is not currently available in that region”, is demonstrably untrue.

Just south of the Lebanese border — internationally recognised yet repeatedly breached by Israel for decades— Apple Maps works very well, even for minor Zionist settlements.

Apple Maps also functions clearly and well in neighbouring Syria. As Cadwalladr wrote on X about Lebanon: “there’s lots of ‘detail’, just not the place names”.

Even more gravely, she highlighted Apple’s “major business interests in Israel” and the fact that “Israel is erasing Lebanese villages” on a multiple-daily basis.

Apple and apartheid

Apple’s embeddedness in the Israeli apartheid state is well-documented. For one thing, Apple’s second-largest R&D centre is based in Israel.

Since 2012, Apple has acquired multiple Israeli technology firms, with the most recent reported $2 billion takeover of Israeli spyware firm Q.ai in January this year.

Israeli start-up Q.ai’s flagship tech model reads facial movements and interprets non-verbal communication, allowing it to plausibly read minds and unspoken thoughts.

There’s no other way to dress it: Apple bought a Zionist-manufactured AI technology that’s as close to non-invasive, non-supernatural telepathy as currently possible.

According to Bloomberg, the facial cue tracking technology — based on visual capture — is supposed to help with audio products like AirPods and audio features like Siri.

Strangely enough, Bloomberg’s business promo piece does not explain how exactly the visual detection software is supposed to help with any audio output.

It gets worse, however. In June 2024 the Intercept reported that Apple whistleblowers decried the company for matching employees’ donations to illegal Zionist settlement projects in Occupied Palestine and to the IOF during the Gaza genocide.

So while Apple didn’t remove Lebanon from its Maps for Israel today specifically, the corporation’s longstanding ties to the Zionist project — which has consistently threatened Lebanon and its people —indicate that its ‘blank map’ still holds sinister intentions.

Technologies of erasure

Spatial data sciencist, Johara Meyer, at UCL shared her perspectives on Apple Maps with the Canary, leaning on her advanced critical studies in geography.

She said that mapping services like Apple’s — using detailed satellite imagery and speedy computing systems— have very effectively constructed a veneer of scientific objectivity.

But maps are never neutral representations or ‘mirrors’ of the world. Instead, they are de facto world-making technologies — rather, they are tools of power.

Meyer said:

Blank maps have long been used to foster myths of un-occupied and un-inhabited land to make settler colonial endeavours more imaginable, palatable, and possible.

She added:

Apple removing or even simply not displaying Lebanese places names is not a neutral act—it’s a colonial one. Removing the spatial signifier of the people and memories that live in these places constructs a blank-slate upon which imperial fantasies and geographies can more easily be imagined and imposed.

In geography we call this practice cartographic erasure, or silencing.

Thus we need to understand that Apple scratching Lebanese villages from the map is a threat. As we’ve seen in Gaza, places that are silently erased from the map become communities violently erased from the ground.

Meyer bluntly concluded:

The map of Lebanon isn’t blank; it’s been strategically erased. And the Apple isn’t bitten — it’s rotten to the core.

Featured image via X/ Villgecrazylady

Tags: Lebanon
Share144Tweet90ShareSendShareShare
Previous Post

Starmer has lost half of Labour’s 2024 voters

Next Post

Starmer is slammed by establishment elites for not being ENOUGH of a war hawk

Next Post
starmer

Starmer is slammed by establishment elites for not being ENOUGH of a war hawk

sudan

Sudan has been "abandoned, not forgotten", top UN official warns

kuwait

Kuwait arrests US-born journalist in social media crackdown over war damage

Logo for Organise South West with name and map image

Organise South West to rebuild grassroots power across the region

green party

The Green Party are finally supporting candidates smeared by Zionists

Comments 3

  1. Doris Bittar says:
    2 months ago

    I never use any other may but Apple’s.
    Areas in Lebanon – all of Lebanon, not only the south were visible. Now all towns and villages are gone. Only the larger cities are visible. the last time I used the map was within this year. They are lying that it was never there. I wish I took screenshots and it’s possible I may have because I often do that. I will check my photos.

    Reply
  2. Doris Bittar says:
    2 months ago

    I never used any other map but Apple’s.
    Areas in Lebanon – all of Lebanon, not only the south were recently visible. Now all towns and villages are gone. Only the larger cities are visible. The last time I used the map was within this year while traveling and hiking in Lebanon. Apple is lying that it detail were never published. It’s possible I may have taken screenshots because I often do that. I will check my photos.

    Reply
    • Cameron Baillie says:
      2 months ago

      please feel free to get in touch if you find a screenshot!

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

nuclear weapons
Analysis

Labour ignores failure of anti-nuclear weapons conference it spoke at

by Tom Pashby
4 June 2026
Jewish Peaceniks UK 2024 action on the Southbank
Global

Jewish Peaceniks UK to install ‘Gaza Tent’ on London’s Southbank

by The Canary
4 June 2026
world cup
Analysis

The biggest international stars missing from the 2026 World Cup

by Alaa Shamali
4 June 2026
Publicity image for Disability Pride Catwalk Three models wear the Reconditioned Jean
News

Young adaptive clothing line hosts first Disability Pride Catwalk in Manchester

by The Canary
4 June 2026
world cup
Analysis

Manchester City leads the world… List of the most represented clubs at the 2026 World Cup

by Alaa Shamali
4 June 2026

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact [email protected]

For other enquiries, contact: [email protected]

Complaints and Corrections

About the Canary

Meet the Team

© Canary Media Ltd 2026, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Ok

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart