Surprising nobody, ICANN calls off Oman meeting
The bad news: ICANN has cancelled its meeting in Oman this October. The good news: you’re all going to Bali instead!
The ICANN 87 Annual General Meeting will now take place at the conference center attached to The Westin Resort Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia, from October 17 to 22. Those are the same dates as the scheduled meeting in Muscat.
While ICANN scrupulously avoided explicitly laying the blame at the feet of Donald Trump, from whom the Org has been cowering since his second term as US president began, the relocation of the AGM is not unexpected and certainly due to the ongoing US-Israeli war on Iran.
While the timing may be coincidental, ICANN’s announcement came less than a week after an increasingly unpredictable Trump threatened to bomb Oman, which has been acting largely as a neutral mediator to date.
But ICANN merely said:
The decision to relocate the meeting was made in consultation with the meeting hosts and local partners in Oman, with a shared focus on ensuring that the AGM can proceed on schedule and support broad global participation.
…
Accessibility, travel reliability, and the ability to participate, both in person and online, are essential to its success. In light of recent developments affecting regional airspace, ICANN has taken this step now to provide certainty for participants and ensure the meeting can move forward as planned.
Bali is of course a popular tourist destination in the Asia-Pacific region — and the beachfront Westin looks gorgeous — it is a long slog for ICANN participants from North American and Europe. But the risk of accidentally getting shot down is much reduced.
It’s the second time in less than a year ICANN has postponed a meeting in Oman due to regional instability.
ICANN boss: no plans to scrap Oman meeting
ICANN currently has no plans to cancel its 2026 Annual General Meeting, which is due to take place in Muscat, Oman, later this year, according to CEO Kurt Lindqvist.
Speaking at the public forum at ICANN 85 in Mumbai today, Lindqvist responded to a speaker who expressed concerns about the ongoing US-Israel war against Iran, which has seen Iran retaliate against neighbors including Oman.
“We’re obviously aware of the situation, and we’re monitoring it. The Oman meeting is 7 months out, so it’s still quite a long time to go, and a lot of things can change. So, at the moment, we are planning for this to go ahead,” he said.
The Muscat meeting was originally planned for October last year, but was called off due to Israel’s attacks on Iran in June, which affected flight corridors in the region.
Lindqvist added that ICANN always has contingency plans in case a venue becomes inappropriate. Last year, the Muscat meeting was rescheduled to Dublin, Ireland.
It seems likely that if the hostilities in the Middle East have not calmed down by June, ICANN could well pull the plug on Muscat for a second year, giving meeting participants about four months to plan their travel.
Previously, ICANN has relocated meetings due to be held in Puerto Rico and Panama due to hurricane damage and the Zika virus, and several were held entirely online during the Covid-19 pandemic.






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