GCC chief urges international community to take responsibility for halting Israeli violations against Palestinian people

Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi speaks at a joint ministerial meeting between the GCC and Egypt in Makkah. (GCC)
Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi speaks at a joint ministerial meeting between the GCC and Egypt in Makkah. (GCC)
Short Url
Updated 54 sec ago
Follow

GCC chief urges international community to take responsibility for halting Israeli violations against Palestinian people

Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi speaks at a joint ministerial meeting between the GCC and Egypt in Makkah. (GCC)
  • Joint ministerial meeting between GCC, Egypt in Makkah

RIYADH: The secretary-general of the Gulf Cooperation Council on Thursday urged the international community to take responsibility for halting ongoing Israeli violations against the Palestinian people.

Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi said at a joint ministerial meeting between the GCC and Egypt held in Makkah: “The alarming escalation and ongoing violations faced by the Palestinian people represent a blatant threat to their identity and rights, which we categorically reject.

“We urge the international community to take responsibility for halting these practices that undermine security and stability.”

Albudaiwi thanked Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi for hosting the Extraordinary Arab Summit on Palestine that took place in Cairo on Tuesday.

Arab leaders adopted an Egyptian reconstruction plan for Gaza that would cost $53 billion and avoid displacing Palestinians from the enclave, in contrast to US President Donald Trump’s “Middle East Riviera” vision that received global condemnation.

Albudaiwi affirmed his support for the summit’s outcomes and urged the international community to participate in the initiative to accelerate the rehabilitation and reconstruction of Gaza after the destruction caused by Israeli aggression, emphasizing that the future of Gaza should be within the framework of a unified Palestinian state and the implementation of the two-state solution.

He reiterated his rejection of placing any burden on Egypt due to “inhumane and unjust calls for the displacement of the Palestinian people.”

He also announced that the “Trade and Investment Forum between the GCC and the Arab Republic of Egypt” would be held this year in Egypt.

The forum will aim to enhance economic and trade relations between the GCC and Egypt, providing a platform for investors to explore promising investment opportunities across various economic sectors in Egypt, as well as addressing the challenges facing GCC investors in the country.


Saudi Arabian Scouts Association volunteers assist visitors at the Two Holy Mosques

Saudi Arabian Scouts Association volunteers assist visitors at the Two Holy Mosques
Updated 18 sec ago
Follow

Saudi Arabian Scouts Association volunteers assist visitors at the Two Holy Mosques

Saudi Arabian Scouts Association volunteers assist visitors at the Two Holy Mosques

MAKKAH: Since the beginning of Ramadan, 665 young men from the Saudi Arabian Scouts Association have volunteered to serve pilgrims, worshippers, fasters and visitors at the Two Holy Mosques.

The initiative is being run in cooperation with the General Administration of Education in Makkah, and the General Administration of Education in Madinah, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Abdulrahman Al-Mudayris, secretary-general of the association, affirmed that the scouts members eagerly and passionately seek each year to participate in providing services to the visitors and pilgrims at the Two Holy Mosques, offering all kinds of assistance to ensure their comfort and peace of mind.

Al-Mudayris said the 2025 public service camps project in Makkah and Madinah, which continues until the end of the month, seeks to achieve several goals.

These include serving worshippers and pilgrims at the Grand Mosque and the Prophet’s Mosque in cooperation with the relevant bodies, in so doing strengthening participants’ volunteer work values, developing an appreciation of the value of national belonging, and showing the nation’s generosity toward pilgrims.


Saudi Arabia participates at London Book Fair

Saudi Arabia participates at London Book Fair
Updated 4 min 40 sec ago
Follow

Saudi Arabia participates at London Book Fair

Saudi Arabia participates at London Book Fair

RIYADH: The Literature, Publishing and Translation Commission is preparing to lead Saudi Arabia’s participation at the London Book Fair 2025, which will take place from March 11-13 at the Olympia Exhibition Center in the UK capital.

The participation aims to strengthen cultural relations and knowledge exchange between Saudi Arabia and the UK, as well as to enrich cooperation in literature, publishing and translation. It also seeks to enhance the presence of Saudi publishing houses and literary agencies in major cultural events both regionally and globally.

By leading Saudi Arabia’s participation in international book fairs, the commission aims to provide a platform for Saudi publishers and literary agents to connect with global publishing houses. This contributes to fostering knowledge exchange and exposing publishers and literary agents to international publishing experiences, driven by a belief in the importance of communication between the local and global publishing sectors and its impact on developing the cultural sector and enriching Arabic content.
 


How Saudi Arabia’s mission to become a global AI hub sparked a race for tech talent

How Saudi Arabia’s mission to become a global AI hub sparked a race for tech talent
Updated 7 min 28 sec ago
Follow

How Saudi Arabia’s mission to become a global AI hub sparked a race for tech talent

How Saudi Arabia’s mission to become a global AI hub sparked a race for tech talent
  • Investment, education, and innovation are closing the skills gap and creating a globally competitive workforce
  • Graduates and job postings in AI fields have boomed, highlighting surging demand for skilled professionals

 

 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s multibillion-dollar investment in artificial intelligence, which is central to its Vision 2030 economic transformation, faces a significant hurdle: a shortage of skilled professionals to drive the nation’s high-tech ambitions.

From cognitive cities such as NEOM to AI-driven healthcare innovations, the Kingdom’s future depends on bridging this skills gap through the implementation of three key strategies: government-led policies, private-sector innovation, and expanded academic opportunities.

A report titled “The State of AI in Saudi Arabia,” published ahead of the 2024 GAIN Summit in Riyadh, highlighted the surging demand for expertise in the field, with AI-related job postings increasing by nearly 54 percent annually between 2018 and 2022.

In 2019, the government established the Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority to oversee the National Strategy for Data and AI, with the aim of training 20,000 specialists to ensure that Saudis can fill highly skilled AI roles by 2030.

The Kingdom is already leading the region in AI strategy development, ranking first in the Arab world and 14th globally, according to a 2024 report by UNESCO.

This confidence has translated into considerable investments. Saudi Arabia secured $1.79 billion in AI-focused funding at the 2025 LEAP tech conference last month, for example, reinforcing the country’s status as a growing hub for innovation.

The 2024 GAIN Summit report also revealed a 42 percent increase in the number of graduates in AI-related subjects between 2022 and 2023, reflecting the Kingdom’s focus on the development of homegrown tech talent.

At the academic level, 86 percent of Saudi universities now offer AI-focused undergraduate degrees, 56 percent have master’s programs, and 9 percent provide opportunities to study for a doctorate.

Central to the Kingdom’s strategy is a reimagining of educational systems to cultivate AI technicians, blending technical rigor with real-world problem-solving to support the digital economy.

Omar Alolayan, co-founder of Almutanabi FinTech, believes AI professionals must strengthen their skills in terms of business acumen, machine-learning operations, cross-functional collaboration, and data engineering.

“Training should focus on industry-specific AI, hands-on deployment, and cross-disciplinary learning to bridge these gaps,” he told Arab News, adding that scalable, accessible AI education is key to closing the talent divide.

“Strategies like online-learning platforms, AI hubs in rural areas, scholarships and mentorship programs can expand access. No-code AI tools also democratize learning for diverse groups, and inclusivity will be critical to sustaining the Kingdom’s AI momentum.”

Efforts to align education with workforce needs are already in motion.

“Schools like King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals have introduced flexible AI and data-science master’s tracks, while government entities like SDAIA are funding nationwide boot camps for all skill levels,” Alolayan said.

He stressed that collaboration is essential and added: “Schools must update curricula, governments should incentivize training, and companies need to offer mentorship and reskilling opportunities.”

The GAIN Summit report also noted that between 2019 and 2023, more than 38,000 students graduated with AI-related degrees, including computer science and engineering, 6,500 of whom studied abroad.

Sultan Albarakati, executive director of the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology Academy, told Arab News: “KAUST is progressively taking a more proactive role in workforce development in the Kingdom.

“It leverages massive open online courses and cloud resources to deliver practical, hands-on AI training at scale across the Kingdom.”

KAUST partners with the public and private sectors to create tailored upskilling programs for Saudi professionals, he added.

“These training programs aim to democratize AI education and are run in partnership with national entities like NTDP (the National Technology Development Program),” Albarakati said.

KAUST also helps connects top graduates with employers through annual showcases, and supports student-led startups through incubators.

Bernard Ghanem, a professor of electrical and computer engineering and director of KAUST’s Center of Excellence on Generative AI, described how the institution translates its cutting-edge research into tools that benefit key sectors in Saudi Arabia.

“Much of KAUST’s AI research is open source, with tools and models made available to the public,” he told Arab News.

“Leveraging the world-class AI research at KAUST, the center aims to develop an easy-to-use, no-code platform for non-experts to use our open-source models.”

Private enterprises are also accelerating the Kingdom’s AI capabilities, through strategic investments and infrastructure projects. Alibaba Cloud, for example, has partnered with Tuwaiq Academy and STC to launch AI-training labs at Saudi universities. Databricks has pledged $300 million over the next five years to support AI and data adoption in the country.

In 2023, SDAIA partnered with Google Cloud to launch the Elevate Program, a five-year initiative designed to train 1,000 women from 28 countries in machine learning, with plans to upskill more than 25,000 by 2028.

Fadi Kanafani, general manager for the Middle East region at SoftServe, emphasized the important role such partnerships play in striking a balance between the retention of local talent and the utilization of international expertise.

“Retaining top AI talent while attracting global expertise requires a multifaceted approach that combines research incentives, industry collaboration and career-development opportunities,” he told Arab News.

He also noted that initiatives such as grants and fellowships for AI research could incentivize Saudi professionals to lead groundbreaking projects while attracting international experts.

“Establishing AI hubs within giga-projects like NEOM can foster collaboration between local and global talent, creating an ecosystem where innovation thrives,” Kanafani said.

Career-acceleration programs, developed with partners such as Aramco and the Ministry of Investment, are also vital for efforts to provide Saudis with world-class domestic opportunities, he added.
 

 


Islamic Affairs Ministry launches programs to distribute dates and serve iftar in Kosovo

Islamic Affairs Ministry launches programs to distribute dates and serve iftar in Kosovo
Updated 13 min 35 sec ago
Follow

Islamic Affairs Ministry launches programs to distribute dates and serve iftar in Kosovo

Islamic Affairs Ministry launches programs to distribute dates and serve iftar in Kosovo

RIYADH: The Ministry of Islamic Affairs this week launched the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques’ gift programs for distributing dates and serving iftar to people fasting in Kosovo, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The initiative, represented by the religious attache at the Kingdom’s embassy in Bosnia and Herzegovina, took place at Aladdin High School in the capital, Pristina. It was launched in the presence of Consul at the Saudi Embassy in Albania Sultan Al-Sahli, and the Grand Mufti and Head of the Islamic Sheikhdom in Kosovo Sheikh Naim Ternava.

As part of the program, five tonnes of dates will be distributed, benefiting 20,000 individuals, while the iftar initiative will benefit about 6,000 Muslim men and women throughout the holy month of Ramadan.

According to SPA, Sheikh Amer Al-Anzi, the religious attache at the Kingdom’s embassy in Bosnia and Herzegovina, said that the programs reaffirmed the Kingdom’s long-standing commitment to supporting and leading Islamic initiatives.

He described them as a generous gesture by the Kingdom’s leadership, reflecting its dedication to caring for Muslims and highlighting Saudi Arabia’s support for Muslims around the world.

Sheikh Ternava said that the Kingdom had taken great historical and humanitarian stands with Kosovo in the humanitarian, developmental, economic, social and religious fields.

He said that these annual programs were evidence of Saudi Arabia’s dedication to addressing the needs of Muslims, praying that the Kingdom’s leadership would be rewarded for serving Islam and Muslims, particularly the Muslim community in Kosovo.


Trump aide Witkoff says he is arranging talks with Ukraine in Saudi Arabia

Steve Witkoff, White House special envoy for the Middle East, accompanied by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
Steve Witkoff, White House special envoy for the Middle East, accompanied by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
Updated 1 min 40 sec ago
Follow

Trump aide Witkoff says he is arranging talks with Ukraine in Saudi Arabia

Steve Witkoff, White House special envoy for the Middle East, accompanied by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
  • “We’re now in discussions to coordinate a meeting with the Ukrainians,” Witkoff told reporters at White House
  • Envoy said it would likely be in Riyadh or Jeddah

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, said on Thursday he is in discussions with Ukraine for a peace agreement framework to end hostilities with Russia and that a meeting is planned next week with the Ukrainians in Saudi Arabia.
“We’re now in discussions to coordinate a meeting with the Ukrainians,” Witkoff told reporters at the White House. He said it would likely be in Riyadh or Jeddah.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he will visit Saudi Arabia next Monday, a day before the planned talks there between senior Ukrainian and US officials.
“After that, my team will stay in Saudi Arabia to work with our American partners. Ukraine is most interested in peace,” he said in a post on X.

Trump also said on Thursday that he will visit Saudi Arabia, stating that the visit is likely to take place during the next month and a half.
Trump and Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky had acrimonious talks at the White House on February 28 but since then the two sides have resumed work on a revenue-sharing minerals deal.
At his speech to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday, Trump said he had received a letter from Zelensky in which the Ukrainian leader said he was “ready to come to the negotiating table as soon as possible.”
Referring to the Saudi Arabia meeting, Witkoff said, “I think the idea is to get down a framework for a peace agreement and an initial ceasefire as well.”