Saudi Arabia’s AlUla, Kenya’s Space for Giants sign deal to enhance natural reserves

The Royal Commission for AlUla Governorate has partnered with Kenyan-based Space for Giants, an organization specializing in environmental conservation. (SPA)
The Royal Commission for AlUla Governorate has partnered with Kenyan-based Space for Giants, an organization specializing in environmental conservation. (SPA)
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Updated 03 December 2023
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Saudi Arabia’s AlUla, Kenya’s Space for Giants sign deal to enhance natural reserves

Saudi Arabia’s AlUla, Kenya’s Space for Giants sign deal to enhance natural reserves
  • The partnership aims to protect biodiversity in AlUla, reduce carbon emissions and increase carbon storage capabilities

JEDDAH: The Royal Commission for AlUla Governorate has partnered with Kenyan-based Space for Giants, an organization specializing in environmental conservation, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Saturday.

The partnership aims to protect biodiversity in AlUla, reduce carbon emissions and increase carbon storage capabilities in AlUla’s natural reserves.

Over the next three years, the two parties will work together to design and implement joint activities focused on managing, protecting and monitoring biodiversity and natural environments.

These efforts will align with international standards and support the goals of the Saudi Green Initiative, which was launched by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in 2021 to promote climate action, and with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030.

The partnership includes providing nature conservation groups in the authority’s natural reserves with the necessary equipment, systems and capabilities to protect areas and ensure the health and safety of rangers.

It will also look to develop means and techniques of communication between nature protectors to enhance their capabilities to preserve reserves and share data quickly.

The partnership also includes developing the management of the reserves to enable them to achieve the requirements of the IUCN Green List certification by 2025, as well as working to reduce carbon emissions and increase carbon storage.

Both parties are also keen to promote a sustainable and environmentally friendly tourism model in AlUla, SPA said.

RCU is developing natural reserves throughout AlUla Governorate, which include Sharaan, Al-Gharamil, Wadi Nakhla, Harrat Al-Zaben and Harrat Awairid, each of which is characterized by distinctive plants, organisms, and geological features.

The reserves extend over an area exceeding 12,000 sq km, constituting more than 50 percent of the land area of Al-Ula governorate.

The nature reserves are patrolled with 154 AlUla nature conservancy staff who have completed an 18-month training program.


Thousands treated under KSrelief volunteer medical program

Thousands treated under KSrelief volunteer medical program
Updated 14 sec ago
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Thousands treated under KSrelief volunteer medical program

Thousands treated under KSrelief volunteer medical program
  • Nursing, infectious diseases, emergency clinics provide care
  • Services provided for vulnerable people in Yemen, Mauritania

RIYADH: Thousands have recently benefitted from the volunteer medical services provided by the Kingdom’s aid agency KSrelief in Yemen and Mauritania, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Tuesday.

In September, mobile clinics in the Haradh district of Yemen’s Hajjah governorate provided medical services more than 2,000 people.

Among those treated were 732 patients who received preventive care for epidemic diseases.

The emergency clinic treated 391 patients, while 314 individuals received treatment in the internal medicine clinic.

Medical staffers in the Al-Gharza area treated 884, 631, 532 and 35 people in the emergency, internal medicine, infectious diseases, and surgery and dressing clinics and departments, respectively.

Additionally, the nursing services department treated 588 patients, medicines were dispensed to 2,047 individuals, and the awareness and education clinic assisted eight individuals.

Eight waste-disposal activities were also carried out.

Also, 19 patients benefited from reproductive health services, and eight individuals participated in awareness and education sessions.

In terms of ancillary services, 712 people received nursing care, 1,399 individuals were provided with medication, 72 patients received care in the surgery and dressing clinic, and eight waste-disposal activities were completed.

In addition, 321 specialized operations were carried out in Nema, Mauritania from Oct. 9 to 16.

The medical team members, who are a part of the Saudi Noor volunteer program to combat vision-related conditions, screened 3,150 individuals and provided spectacles for 825 during the period.


Saudi aid agency distributes thousands of food parcels globally

Saudi aid agency distributes thousands of food parcels globally
Updated 46 min 12 sec ago
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Saudi aid agency distributes thousands of food parcels globally

Saudi aid agency distributes thousands of food parcels globally

RIYADH: The Kingdom’s aid agency KSrelief has continued to distribute food aid to thousands of vulnerable people across the globe, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Tuesday.

The agency recently distributed 916 food aid parcels and 916 hygiene kits in the Idlib region of Syria, benefiting 5,496 individuals.

And in Syria’s Aleppo a further 517 food parcels and 517 health kits were delivered, benefitting 3,102 people.

In South Sudan 2,000 displaced families in the Equatorial region received food aid.

And a further 2,387 food aid packages were distributed in the Batken region of Kyrgyzstan, reaching 113,935 people as a part of the 2024 food aid initiative for vulnerable families in the country.


World must do more to ensure Middle East security, Saudi minister tells Mediterranean Union

World must do more to ensure Middle East security, Saudi minister tells Mediterranean Union
Updated 29 October 2024
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World must do more to ensure Middle East security, Saudi minister tells Mediterranean Union

World must do more to ensure Middle East security, Saudi minister tells Mediterranean Union
  • Waleed Elkhereiji tells organization’s 9th Regional Forum in Barcelona the region is at a critical crossroads as a result of Israeli aggression in Gaza and Lebanon
  • He says international community has 2 options: act in support of international law and a 2-state solution, or risk further escalation and suffering that will undermine its credibility

BARCELONA: The Saudi deputy foreign minister, Waleed Elkhereiji, spoke at the Union for the Mediterranean’s ninth Regional Forum in Barcelona on Monday about the importance of efforts to enhance regional security, at a time when decisive and practical international action is required to halt a continuous cycle of violence and destruction.

He said the region is at a critical crossroads as a result of Israeli aggression in Gaza and Lebanon, which presents the international community with two options: to act effectively in support of international law and to reinforce the need for a two-state solution to the wider Israeli-Palestinian conflict, or to risk further escalations and deeper suffering that undermines the credibility of international efforts to maintain peace and security in the region.

Elkhereiji highlighted the severe nature of the humanitarian crises in Palestine and Lebanon, which he said were unbearable. He condemned Israel’s systematic targeting and forced displacement of innocent civilians, and the deliberate destruction of buildings and infrastructure, as blatant violations of international humanitarian law that continue to take place without any accountability or punishment.

He reiterated the strong condemnation by authorities in the Kingdom of attacks by Israeli forces against civilians and employees of the UN and other organizations, including the UN Relief and Works Agency and the UN Interim Force in Lebanon.

He said Saudi Arabia rejects any expansion of illegal settlements in the West Bank, or actions by Israel that affect the legal and historical status of Jerusalem, and calls for an end to such activity to avoid prolonging the cycle of violence and destruction.

The minister said verbal condemnation is no longer sufficient in efforts to deter further violence, as he called for bolder and more decisive action from the international community. To that end, he said the Kingdom looks forward to hosting the first high-level meeting of the Global Coalition for the Two-State Solution in Riyadh on Oct. 30.

Elkhereiji said securing the implementation of a two-state solution is a collective international responsibility and offers the only viable path to a lasting peace, through recognition of the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and an independent state.

This, he added, is a fundamental condition for ensuring stability in the region. He said the Kingdom remains committed to working with its partners to ensure such a solution does not remain a distant aspiration but becomes a tangible reality in the near future.


Saudi teenager helps connect highschoolers with new opportunities

Saudi teenager helps connect highschoolers with new opportunities
Updated 28 October 2024
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Saudi teenager helps connect highschoolers with new opportunities

Saudi teenager helps connect highschoolers with new opportunities
  • Over 1,000 young Saudis have joined Talal Al-Qahtani’s online portal for ‘change-makers’

RIYADH: Committed to empowering students with the right tools to succeed, Talal Al-Qahtani, 17, founded Saudi Extracurriculars for Students, a nonprofit organization dedicated to help aspiring highschoolers become “changemakers.”

To address what he saw as a gap in the market, he founded SEFS to connect Saudi youth with a range of extracurricular activities in the Kingdom, such as community service, internships, music, art and culture.  

The young founder’s story begins in 2007, when he was born in Virginia, US, to a Saudi father and American mother. When he was two his family moved to Riyadh where he enrolled in Manarat Al-Riyadh International School (MARIS) and studied there from kindergarten to 12th grade.   

Approaching the last few years of high school and struggling to find extracurricular projects, Al-Qahtani took it upon himself to create SEFS.

He told Arab News that his aim is “to create an online portal for students to connect with new opportunities across all Saudi Arabia … I decided to create something I wished I had at the time. My thought process is if something needed is missing then I need to fill that gap.”  

Less than a year since its launch in January, SEFS has 1,000-plus online members. Furthermore, many have been accepted to their dream universities with the mentorship, study programs and opportunities offered to them. 

“We’ve helped students move themselves towards a positive change so they themselves can make a positive impact on their community as a whole.” 

The organization’s mission plan is to turn students into “changemakers” — people who work to benefit others — Al-Qahtani said.

“A changemaker is someone who can work and collaborate with other people to create a greater change, and I say there is no ‘I’ in changemaker.”  

Al-Qahtani, a senior at MARIS, has several milestones in his academic career, such as winning the best delegate award at three Model UNs, and chairing a committee. 

Al-Qahtani is currently an intern at King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology’s petrochemical research institute. In this role, he conducts research on methane decomposition for hydrogen production and has analyzed more than 40 studies on methane decomposition. 

Al-Qahtani was also social media marketing manager for Sawada Specialty Coffee, a cafe in Riyadh, where he gained marketing experience and learned how to become an effective communicator. 

“Working closely with the cafe’s team and the owner taught me a lot of vital communication skills. Marketing requires creative thinking and taking part in various activities that deal with problem solving ... While interning as a market research analyst I got to create effective market dashboards with research in current design courses in Saudi and sustainable designs.” 

Al-Qahtani previously worked as head of marketing and communications for TEDxMARIS where he led a team of marketers and took what he learnt to create a marketing initiative club at his school, where he teaches “vital skills in marketing,” he said.

“To help my members take their skills and newfound passion further, I currently bridge my members to brand new marketing opportunities at events in Saudi Arabia.” 

SEFS aligns closely with the goals of Vision 2030, creating positive opportunities for young people by connecting them with new opportunities to advance their careers.  

“We help students not only through gaining new skills but in getting accepted to top universities around the world so that they can contribute to the economy of Saudi Arabia.” 

Al-Qahtani’s goal is to expand SEFS through collaborating with the Ministry of Education in Saudi Arabia to make a change in the Kingdom’s high school environment.


Saudi deputy minister receives German envoy in Riyadh

Saudi deputy minister receives German envoy in Riyadh
Updated 28 October 2024
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Saudi deputy minister receives German envoy in Riyadh

Saudi deputy minister receives German envoy in Riyadh

Saudi Deputy Minister for Political Affairs Saud Al-Sati received the German Ambassador to the Kingdom Michael Kindsgrab in Riyadh on Monday.

Al-Sati also held separate meetings with the Indian Ambassador to the Kingdom Dr. Suhel Ajaz Khan and Kazakhstan’s Ambassador to the Kingdom Madiyar Menilbekov on the same day, the Foreign Ministry announced on X.

Bilateral relations and ways to strengthen them were discussed during the meetings, alongside various other topics of common interest.