TikTok’s explosive growth across the Middle East and North Africa has come with an equally sharp rise in scrutiny. In its Q3 2025 Community Guidelines Enforcement Report, the platform revealed it removed over 17 million videos across MENA, highlighting the growing role of both technology and human oversight in managing online content.
From July to September 2025, TikTok removed 17.41 million videos in the region for breaching its rules, with nearly 95 per cent of content in the UAE taken down within 24 hours. The platform says rapid removals are critical as short-form video trends spread quickly—sometimes with dangerous consequences.
Beyond video removals, TikTok banned 73,702 LIVE hosts and disrupted 168,205 livestreams, reinforcing its stance on real-time content moderation. The platform relies on automated detection tools alongside trained moderation teams to review appeals and address emerging risks.
The report comes at a time when governments are tightening controls on children’s digital exposure. In the UAE, the recently approved Child Digital Safety Law introduces age-based safeguards to protect minors from harmful content. TikTok says its own efforts align with these goals, noting that it removed more than 22 million suspected underage accounts globally during the same quarter.
Country-level data shows varying enforcement scales across MENA. Iraq recorded the highest number of removals, followed by Saudi Arabia and Egypt, where proactive detection rates exceeded 99 per cent. Egypt alone saw nearly 835,000 livestreams interrupted, underlining the challenges of moderating live content.
TikTok also disclosed significant enforcement related to LIVE monetisation, with millions of sessions and creators facing warnings or demonetisation globally. According to the platform, these measures aim to reward safe, authentic content while limiting harmful or exploitative behaviour.
As debates over youth safety, platform responsibility, and digital regulation intensify, TikTok’s latest data underscores a broader reality: viral reach now demands equally rapid accountability.















































