Saudi Shoura speaker visits Albania

Dr. Abdullah Mohammed Al-Asheikh arrives in Tirana, Albania. (SPA)
Dr. Abdullah Mohammed Al-Asheikh arrives in Tirana, Albania. (SPA)
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Updated 23 June 2024
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Saudi Shoura speaker visits Albania

Saudi Shoura speaker visits Albania

TIRANA: Speaker of the Saudi Shoura Council Dr. Abdullah Mohammed Al-Asheikh on Sunday arrived in Tirana, Albania, where he will be heading a delegation during his official visit.

Upon his arrival at Tirana International Airport, Al-Asheikh was received by the Chairman of the Albanian-Saudi Friendship Committee Klevis Goji; Saudi Ambassador to Albania Faisal Hefzi; Albanian Ambassador to the Kingdom Samir Bala; and a number of senior officials from the Kingdom and Albanian parliament, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

 


Google and KAUST unite to advance AI research in Saudi Arabia

Google recently awarded five seed grants to faculty members at KAUST to support research in AI in Saudi Arabia. (Supplied)
Google recently awarded five seed grants to faculty members at KAUST to support research in AI in Saudi Arabia. (Supplied)
Updated 13 sec ago
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Google and KAUST unite to advance AI research in Saudi Arabia

Google recently awarded five seed grants to faculty members at KAUST to support research in AI in Saudi Arabia. (Supplied)
  • The grants, which total $100,000, will fund research projects focused on multilingual, multimodal machine learning, specifically using generative and large language models

JEDDAH: Google recently awarded five seed grants to faculty members at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology to support research in artificial intelligence in Saudi Arabia.

The grants, which total $100,000, will fund research projects focused on multilingual, multimodal machine learning, specifically using generative and large language models (LLMs).
 
The researchers from the computer, electrical and mathematical sciences and engineering (CEMSE) division at KAUST will explore topics such as health, cross-cultural language understanding, sustainability, privacy and education. The grants are part of Google’s broader efforts to support AI research and development worldwide.
 
Sarah Al Husseini, Google’s head of public policy in Saudi Arabia, emphasized the company’s commitment to empowering local researchers and institutions to develop solutions that benefit users, businesses and governments in an AI-driven world.
 
She said: “Google is committed to empowering local researchers and institutions to introduce relevant solutions to users, businesses and governments in an AI-first world. By investing in pioneering research with KAUST, we hope to continue fostering multilingual, multimodal machine learning breakthroughs that will benefit the region and beyond.”
 
Gianluca Setti, dean of the CEMSE division at KAUST, welcomed the collaboration.

“It is great to see Google recognize the caliber of talent in KAUST's CEMSE faculty,” he said. “These grants will allow our faculty to strengthen the efforts in multilingual, multimodal machine learning, and the development of LLMs in areas with tremendous potential for societal impact.”

Grant recipients include Bernard Ghanem, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering and computer science, who will work on redefining traditional continual learning setups and evaluation; Tareq Al-Naffouri, professor of electrical and computer engineering, who will develop a flexible and efficient open radio access network infrastructure; and Mohamed Elhoseiny, assistant professor in computer science, in a study titled “No Culture Left Behind: Assistive Multilingual Vision LLMs for Cultural and Cross-Cultural Vision-Language Understanding.”

Other faculty members who received grants are Di Wang, assistant professor of computer science, and Xin Gao, professor of computer science. Google will also pair each faculty awardee with a Google researcher who can serve as their sponsor.

The grants coincide with KAUST’s announcement of a new Center of Excellence in Generative AI with Ghanem as its chair. The center aims to accelerate and establish excellence in generative AI research and development in the Kingdom.


SR9 million awarded to Saudi students with talent in cultural skills 

Minister of Education Yousef Al-Benyan and Hamed Fayez, deputy minister of culture attended the ceremony. (@moe_gov_sa)
Minister of Education Yousef Al-Benyan and Hamed Fayez, deputy minister of culture attended the ceremony. (@moe_gov_sa)
Updated 31 min 39 sec ago
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SR9 million awarded to Saudi students with talent in cultural skills 

Minister of Education Yousef Al-Benyan and Hamed Fayez, deputy minister of culture attended the ceremony. (@moe_gov_sa)
  • The Cultural Skills Competition is a national contest launched by the Ministry of Culture in partnership with the Ministry of Education
  • Contest is aimed at motivating the younger generations to participate, create and excel in shaping the future of culture and the arts

RIYADH: The Saudi culture and education ministries recently honored pre-university general education students who were winners of the second edition of the Cultural Skills Competition held in Riyadh.

The winners received prizes worth a total of SR9 million ($2.4 million) while the organizers of the competition signed three agreements to support distinguished talents.

Minister of Education Yousef Al-Benyan, Hamed Fayez, deputy minister of culture, officials from the two ministries, Saudi cultural and art pioneers, and parents of the winning students attended the ceremony.

The Cultural Skills Competition is a national contest launched by the Ministry of Culture in partnership with the Ministry of Education, aimed at motivating the younger generations to participate, create and excel in shaping the future of culture and the arts.

The competition features 10 categories: drawing; Arabic calligraphy; filmmaking; photography; strumming; singing; short stories; manga; poetry; and theater. Those categories aim to discover and develop the skills of male and female students in cultural and artistic fields and to achieve the perfect investment of their energies.

Fayez affirmed the Ministry of Culture’s support for the cultural skills of students, noting that such competition contributes to a promising and prosperous future in the cultural sector.

“Education is the basis of our journey to build our cultural capacities. Our strategic partnerships with the Ministry of Education have culminated in many proud achievements, emphasizing the importance of supporting that partnership for greater prospects,” Fayez added.

The winner in each category was awarded SR100,000 ($26,659), while second place received SR75,000 and third was awarded SR50,000, in addition to honoring their parents with financial rewards totaling SR1.4 million.

 This year, the competition attracted an impressive turnout and broad interest from students, exceeding 400,000 participants in the various categories, according to Dr. Yousef Al-Hamoud, director-general of student activities at the Ministry of Education.

“Competition among students in such events helps them discover and refine their artistic and cultural skills,” Al-Hamoud said.

Al-Hamoud told Arab News that the success of the Cultural Skills Competition reflects the importance of joint work between the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Culture, which contributes to developing the cultural and artistic capacities of participants, achieving the goals of Saudi Vision 2030, and building a competitive citizen globally.

During the ceremony, three agreements were signed with strategic partners, to support outstanding talent. The first agreements were concluded with Manga Arabia Co., a company specialized in making creative content, and producing and publishing Arabic and Japanese storyboards. The company will serve as the training platform for manga category participants to learn and master this art and transform the passion of talented students into distinct artistic creations, according to a statement issued by the organizers of the Competition.

The second agreement was concluded with Anghami, a Saudi company working in digital music. It will produce mini-albums, each containing four songs, for the winners of the singing and strumming categories, in addition to holding a specialized training camp that focuses on refining their artistic capabilities.

The third agreement was concluded with MBC Media Solutions, which will host outstanding talents at the MBC Academy, include them in the upcoming skills database of MBC’s business, and provide them with opportunities to appear and shine in multiple fields.


Head of Project Masam: ‘There is a long way to reach a mine-free Yemen’

Head of Project Masam: ‘There is a long way to reach a mine-free Yemen’
Updated 07 July 2024
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Head of Project Masam: ‘There is a long way to reach a mine-free Yemen’

Head of Project Masam: ‘There is a long way to reach a mine-free Yemen’

RIYADH: The head of Saudi Arabia’s Project Masam said there is still a long way to go despite the project having cleared more than 450,000 landmines and explosive remnants of war in Yemen.

“There is still a long way to go to reach a mine-free Yemen”, the project’s managing director, Ousama Al-Gosaibi, said in a statement.

Since at least 2015, Houthi militias have planted landmines — conventional and improvised — in “quantities and sophistication that far exceeds reasonable limits,” Al-Gosaibi said

Masam is a humanitarian land mine clearance project in Yemen launched by Saudi Arabia in 2018. Since launching, Masam teams have cleared more than 450,000 explosive items, the statement said.

Al-Gosaibi said the project continues to perform its work in “exceptional circumstances in every sense of the word, most notably that the military operations and mine-laying operations have not stopped yet.”

He also noted how difficult the work is because of the lack of minefield maps and “the difficulty of the terrain” in which minefields are located or suspected to be located.

Houthi militias continue to advance and evolve the manufacture and planting of these landmines across Yemeni land, he claimed.

Given the difficult circumstances, Al-Gosaibi praised the Yemeni people’s cooperation with the project’s de-mining teams, who in part rely on civilian reports of suspected minefields to carry out their operations.

In that regard, the managing director highlighted the success of awareness-raising campaigns — known as explosive ordnance risk education — aimed at educating the public about the dangers of mines and how to behave should they suspect the presence of landmines or explosive devices.

 


KSrelief carries out humanitarian projects in Lebanon, Indonesia

KSrelief carries out humanitarian projects in Lebanon, Indonesia
Updated 07 July 2024
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KSrelief carries out humanitarian projects in Lebanon, Indonesia

KSrelief carries out humanitarian projects in Lebanon, Indonesia

The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center has been actively involved in various humanitarian projects across Lebanon and Indonesia.

In Lebanon, KSrelief continued implementing the Al-Amal Charitable Bakery project, in its fourth stage, in the Akkar Governorate and Miniyeh District.

During the past week, the project distributed 150,000 bags of bread to needy families, benefiting 125,000 individuals, including Syrians, Palestinians, and the local host community in northern Lebanon. 

KSrelief also funded the ambulance service of the Subul Al-Salam Social Association in the Miniyeh District.

Over the last week, the service carried out 62 emergency missions, including transporting patients to and from hospitals and assisting victims of traffic accidents.

This support is part of a project aimed at enhancing ambulance transport services in Lebanon, including in areas with refugee communities.

In Indonesia, KSrelief concluded a volunteer medical project for pediatric heart surgery in Medan, from June 24 to July 1.

The project involved 27 volunteers from various medical specialties, who performed 25 open-heart surgeries. 


Saudi Arabia and Jordan airdrop food aid to the Gaza Strip

Saudi Arabia and Jordan airdrop food aid to the Gaza Strip
Updated 07 July 2024
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Saudi Arabia and Jordan airdrop food aid to the Gaza Strip

Saudi Arabia and Jordan airdrop food aid to the Gaza Strip
  • KSrelief and Jordan’s charity group JHCO deliver 30 tonnes of food aid
  • KSrelief chief Abdullah Al-Rabeeah says the food aid does not require heating

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia and Jordan airdropped 30 tonnes of ready-to-eat food for besieged Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, the Saudi aid agency KSrelief said on Sunday.

In a statement carried by the SPA, the agency said the airdrop was carried out with the Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organization and the Jordanian Hashemite Armed Forces.

The food supplies dropped by air are suitable for immediate consumption without the need for heating, Dr. Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al-Rabeeah, KSrelief director general, said in the statement.

KSrelief and other aid agencies have resorted to parachute drops of food aid to Gaza to bypass the closure of border crossings by the Israeli occupation forces, which had previously prevented the entry of humanitarian aid to people in the Strip.

Al-Rabeeah called for the opening of border crossings, noting that delivery through airdrops were not sustainable considering the high number of people in need of humanitarian assistance.

He said KSrelief’s campaign for Palestinians to date has collected more than $184 million. The Kingdom also operated an air bridge consisting of 54 planes and a sea bridge consisting of eight ships is still operating.

The US military also built a temporary sea port in Gaza for the delivery of humanitarian aid, but that had been rendered unstable by stormy seas.

More than 2 million Palestinians have been displaced in Gaza since Israel launched a full-scale war in response to the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas militants that killed 1,200 people and in which about 250 hostages were taken, according to official Israeli figures.

The conflict has claimed the lives of more than 38,000 Palestinians, according to the latest count of Gaza health officials.

Extensive damage to Gaza’s infrastructure has caused a healthcare crisis, with an increase in communicable diseases, especially among children, and brought the entire education system in Gaza to a standstill, according to the UN.