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Saudi Arabia's transformation plans (Vision 2030)

minamino

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I have some friends from Saudi and they tell me about their country and how MBS is trying to progress KSA as a tourist destination. My cousins went to Jeddah and Riyadh and told me about those cities and it felt like they have a lot of potential as a tourist destination especially Jeddah
 
It can only be a tourist destination on the lines of Dubai (ie fake, shallow, man-made tourism)but I doubt MbS would relax the rules to that degree.
 
It can only be a tourist destination on the lines of Dubai (ie fake, shallow, man-made tourism)but I doubt MbS would relax the rules to that degree.

He already is, they've been hosting concerts and music festivals with American singers. Saudi is really liberalizing.
 
Well they already make billions of religious tourism but they're opening up along the lines of Dubai


 
Unless it allows booze and allows women to wear heat friendly clothing, it might not attract that many Western people like what Dubai does.

If they allow non Muslims to visit Mecca or Medina (which I personally dont want) that might allow many to visit though
 
This newly planned Tourist city on the read sea coast has good potential.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neom

Otherwise, i ve been to Jeddah, Mecca and Madina and wasnt too impressed with the infrastructure, facilities and cleanliness. I was wondering where exactly do Saudis spend all their oil $$$.
 
As long as folks are dragged to the town square to have their heads chopped off, the rest of the world's tourists - backpackers included - will be sour.
 
As long as folks are dragged to the town square to have their heads chopped off, the rest of the world's tourists - backpackers included - will be sour.

You are obviously entitled not to go their for holidays. Capital punishment exist in many countries (incl parts of the US). May be time to take stance and call back all your countrymen from such backward places.
 
You are obviously entitled not to go their for holidays. Capital punishment exist in many countries (incl parts of the US). May be time to take stance and call back all your countrymen from such backward places.

I doubt Varun would object that strongly since he was a paid employee in one of those middle east countries himself.
 
They even invited model Emrata to Saudi for a shoot but she declined due to human rights violation by the country
 
Watching the recent travel vloggers has been eye opening, a lot of unexplored natural beauty however waiting for that one British or American tourist to either test limits by do something seedy on Saudi soil and get punished or even kidnapped and it will be back to square one.
 
huge potential - visited KSA recently and this is a changed country now.
 
Watching the recent travel vloggers has been eye opening, a lot of unexplored natural beauty however waiting for that one British or American tourist to either test limits by do something seedy on Saudi soil and get punished or even kidnapped and it will be back to square one.

Maybe thats also ok. Why should the whole world be only catering for western tourist demands? Thats not where the untapped potential of Tourism lies anyway. The rest of the world is picking up and there are many more tourists from Asian counties (esp China and Japan).

Having said that I am sure the new Saudi Prince will have relaxed rules & Laws in this new tourist city of neom.

I ve been to Malysia a few times, which has good tourism industry. Everything was kind of moderate and non-western centred. There were White tourists, Chinese, Arabs, South asians and so on.
 
Well if its going to try and compete with dubai with the glitz and glamour then its got no chance

Its best bet is to find its own niche and promote its natural landscape etc It couldve promoted a lot of its islamic history but unfortunately salmans predecessors have mostly done away with that over the last century
 
MBS is probably the greatest leader from the Saudi Royal family. He has been able to slowly but surely change the image of KSA. He has got Trump and Kushner in his pocket too.
 
MBS is probably the greatest leader from the Saudi Royal family. He has been able to slowly but surely change the image of KSA. He has got Trump and Kushner in his pocket too.

Its going to take more than a year or two of nominal changes before decades of intolerance and restrictions gets wiped away from the publics mind

Saudis got a long way to go if ever to get to a stage where its image changes for the better
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/28/saudi-arabia-has-spent-at-least-15bn-on-sportswashing-report-reveals

Saudi Arabia has spent at least $1.5bn on high-profile international sporting events in a bid to bolster its reputation, a new report reveals.

The oil-rich nation has invested millions across the sporting world, the report by the human rights organisation Grant Liberty says, from chess championships to golf, tennis and $60m alone on the Saudi Cup, the world’s richest horse-racing event with prize money of $20m.

The report, published next week, also details the Kingdom’s $650m ten-year deal with Formula One, whose world championships begin this Sunday and for the first time will include a race in the port city of Jeddah.

Grant Liberty’s analysis outlines the momentous scale of Saudi Arabia’s investments in what they term “sportswashing,” the practice of investing or hosting sporting events in a bid to obscure the Kingdom’s poor human rights record, and tout itself as a new leading global venue for tourism and events.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman launched the Kingdom’s “Vision2030” masterplan five years ago, a sweeping strategic plan intended to reduce Saudi Arabia’s economic dependence on oil. But the plan, touted as a watershed that will transform the Kingdom socially as well as economically, was followed by a broad crackdown on dissent, including the arrest of feminist activists and religious clerics.

The Kingdom has also spearheaded an intervention in Yemen, part of a war that has killed over 100,000 people including at least 12,000 civilians. Observers estimate that at least two-thirds of these deaths were caused by Saudi Arabia’s aggressive campaign of airstrikes.

A recently declassified US intelligence report named MBS as ultimately responsible for the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018. The Guardian recently revealed that a senior Saudi official issued what was perceived as a death threat against United Nations investigator Agnès Callamard to her colleague in January last year, following her investigation of Khashoggi’s murder.

Meanwhile, the Kingdom has spent big to secure involvement in global sporting events, part of efforts to present Saudi Arabia as a newly business-friendly, forward-thinking nation. This includes $145m in a three-year deal with the Spanish Football Association, and $15m in appearance fees for a single Saudi International men’s golf tournament. It also includes $33m to host the Saudi Arabian Masters snooker tournament in the Kingdom, and $100m for the boxing match known as “Clash on the Dunes” between Andy Ruiz Jr and Anthony Joshua in 2019.

Saudi Arabia also cut a $500m 10-year deal with World Wrestling Entertainment in 2014, one where female performers were banned from appearing until two years ago.

“Saudi Arabia is trying to use the good reputation of the world’s best loved sports stars to obscure a human rights record of brutality, torture and murder,” said Grant Liberty’s Lucy Rae, who accused Saudi Arabia of “committing human rights abuses on an industrial scale”.

“The world’s leading sports stars might not have asked to be part of a cynical marketing plan to distract the world from the brutality – but that’s what is happening,” she added.

Grant Liberty compiled reported figures of deals between entities controlled by the Saudi state, such as the organisation Visit Saudi and NEOM, the body overseeing construction of a futuristic $500bn city in the desert, but not individual members of the Saudi royal family, meaning the $1.5bn figure is likely an underestimation of the true scale of the Kingdom’s investments in sports.

Also included is analysis of deals that never came to fruition following an outcry, including a $6m offer to footballers Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi to be the face of the Kingdom’s tourism body Visit Saudi and a controversial $400m takeover-bid for Newcastle United.

The Kingdom has also entered pending bids for forthcoming events, including $200m for the Tyson Fury vs Joshua boxing match set to take place later this year, and $180m in sponsorship for Real Madrid through the Qiddiya project, a tourism and entertainment megaproject in Riyadh under the umbrella of “Vision 2030”.

“Vision 2030 has set the creation of professional sports and a sports industry as one of its goals. That will not only potentially provide employment for thousands of Saudis but it will also improve the quality of life for everyone living in the kingdom,” said Fahad Nazer, spokesperson for the Saudi Arabian embassy in Washington, when asked about Grant Liberty’s findings.

He added: “The kingdom is proud to host and support various athletic and sporting events which not only introduce Saudis to new sports and renowned international athletes but also showcase the kingdom’s landmarks and the welcoming nature of its people to the world.”
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-saudi-economy/saudi-arabia-announces-1-3-trillion-private-sector-investment-push-led-by-aramco-sabic-idUSKBN2BM2PM?il=0

Saudi Arabia’s crown prince said oil firm Aramco and petrochemical firm SABIC would lead investments of 5 trillion riyals ($1.3 trillion) by the local private sector by 2030 under a programme announced on Tuesday for economic diversification.

The move aims to mobilise the Gulf Arab state’s private sector to help wean the economy off its reliance on oil exports, which still account for more than half the state’s income, and develop new sectors to help create jobs for millions of Saudis.

This is part of 12 trillion riyals worth of investments planned by 2030, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said in televised remarks. That also includes 3 trillion riyals from the Public Investment Fund (PIF) and 4 trillion riyals under a new Saudi investment strategy, of which some 2 trillion would be foreign investment.

The total amount would rise to 27 trillion riyals with government spending and domestic consumption.

“The new Shareek (Partner) programme will help the private sector create hundreds of thousands of new jobs and will boost the contribution of the private sector to GDP by up to 65% by the end of the decade,” the prince said.

He later told journalists in a virtual briefing that Aramco and Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) would represent 60% of the 5 trillion riyal investment.

Prince Mohammed said the government has asked the biggest participating firms to lower their dividends in order to raise capital spending.

“That will lead to growth of the company so stakeholders will own more money. In exchange the Saudi government will help them with regulations, more subsidies and other incentives.”

The prince said dividends for those owning shares in Aramco, which listed on the local bourse in 2019, would remain stable.

“We promised them that and we will keep that promise,” he said. The Saudi government still owns 98% of the firm.

Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan told Reuters that 24 companies, the majority listed firms, would invest 2 trillion riyals by 2025 and another 3 trillion riyals by 2030. PIF is a shareholder in most of them, he added.

Jadaan said the state would offer support, including soft loans from Saudi development institutions and tax incentives at free zones, in line with World Trade Organization guidelines.

The crown prince said the government planned to offload its shares in companies in coming years and to IPO projects it is launching.

“We will recycle the money. We shouldn’t keep our shares forever. Whatever mature investment we have we have to IPO. So for example if you own 70% of a company, PIF should maintain majority at 30% and sell 40%,” he told journalists.

The prince has said that Aramco would sell more shares as part of plans to bolster sovereign wealth fund PIF, the main vehicle for boosting Saudi investments at home and abroad.

The prince said on Tuesday that PIF is working with other sovereign wealth funds in the region on a fund called “Invest In Saudi” that would be sized at 500 billion riyals to 1 trillion riyals.

PIF is backing domestic mega-projects such as the flagship tourism project at the Red Sea, planned $500 billion Neom economic zone and the entertainment hub at Qiddya.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/saudi-crown-prince-launches-national-strategy-transport-logistics-spa-2021-06-29/

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman announced plans on Tuesday to launch a second national airline as part of a broader strategy to turn the kingdom into a global logistics hub as it seeks to diversify from oil.

The creation of another flag carrier would catapult Saudi Arabia into the 5th rank globally in terms of air transit traffic, official state media reported, without giving details on when and how the airline would be created.

Prince Mohammad has been spearheading a push for Saudi Arabia, the biggest Arab economy and the largest country in the Gulf geographically, to boost non-oil revenues to about 45 billion riyals ($12.00 billion) by 2030.

Making the kingdom a global logistics hub, which includes the development of ports, rail and road networks, would increase the transport and logistics sector's contribution to gross domestic product to 10% from 6%, state news agency SPA said.

"The comprehensive strategy aims to position Saudi Arabia as a global logistics hub connecting the three continents," Prince Mohammed was quoted as saying in the SPA report.

"This will help other sectors like tourism, haj and umrah to achieve their national targets."

The addition of another airline would increase the number of international destinations from Saudi Arabia to more than 250 and double air cargo capacity to more than 4.5 million tonnes, the SPA report said.

With current flag bearer Saudi Arabian Airlines (Saudia), the kingdom has one of the smallest airline networks in the region relative to its size. Saudia has struggled with losses for years and like global peers, has been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic.

Local media reported earlier this year that the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, (PIF), planned to build a new airport in Riyadh as part of the new airline launch, without giving further details.

The fund is the main vehicle for boosting Saudi Arabian investments at home and abroad as the young prince, known in the West as MbS, seeks to diversify the kingdom’s oil-heavy economy through his Vision 2030 strategy.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/exclusive-new-saudi-airline-plan-takes-aim-emirates-qatar-airways-2021-07-02/

Saudi Arabia plans to target international transit passenger traffic with its new national airline, going head-to-head with Gulf giants Emirates and Qatar Airways and opening up a new front in simmering regional competition.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is pushing economic diversification to wean Saudi Arabia off oil revenues and create jobs, announced a transportation and logistics drive on Tuesday aimed at making the kingdom the fifth-biggest air transit hub.

Two people familiar with the matter said the new airline would boost international routes and echo existing Gulf carriers by carrying people from one country to another via connections in the kingdom, known in the industry as sixth-freedom traffic.

The transport ministry, which has not released details of the plans, did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The strategy marks a shift for Saudi Arabia whose other airlines, like state-owned Saudia and its low cost subsidiary flyadeal, mostly operate domestic services and point-to-point flights to and from the country of 35 million people.

The Saudi expansion threatens to sharpen a battle for passengers at a time when travel has been hit by the coronavirus pandemic. Long-haul flights like those operated by Emirates and Qatar Airways are forecast to take the longest to recover.

Riyadh has already moved to compete with the UAE, the region's business, trade and tourism hub. The Saudi government has said that from 2024 it would stop giving contracts to firms that do not set up regional headquarters in the kingdom.

"Commercial competition in the aviation industry has always been fierce, and regional competition is heating up. Some turbulence in regional relations is on the horizon," said Robert Mogielnicki, resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute.

Dubai, the world's largest international air travel hub, has announced a five-year plan to grow air and shipping routes by 50% and double tourism capacity over the next two decades.

Riyadh has already moved to compete with the UAE, the region's business, trade and tourism hub. The Saudi government has said that starting 2024 it would stop giving contracts to firms that do not set up regional headquarters in the kingdom.

Prince Mohammed is trying to lure foreign capital to create new industries including tourism, with ambitions to increase overall visitors to 100 million by 2030 from 40 million in 2019.

"Saudi Arabia has the ability to push forward with its aviation and tourism strategy when others will be retreating and retracting," aviation consultant Brendan Sobie said.

"It is a risky strategy, but also sensible given its position and overall diversification objective."

However, any airline requires substantial start-up capital and experts warn that if Saudi Arabia's ambition is to compete on transit flights it may have to contend with years of losses.

Saudi Arabia's large population generates direct traffic that could cushion losses as a new airline targets international transit traffic, aviation consultant John Strickland said.

Emirates reported a record $5.5 billion annual loss last month with the pandemic forcing Dubai to step in with $3.1 billion in state support.

Etihad Airways has scaled back its ambitions after it spent billions of dollars to ultimately unsuccessfully compete in building a major hub in United Arab Emirates capital Abu Dhabi.

People familiar with the matter said the new airline could be based in the capital Riyadh, and that sovereign wealth fund PIF is helping set it up.

PIF did not respond to a request for comment.

Saudi Arabia is developing non-religious tourism with mega projects backed by PIF. It has launched social reforms to open up the country, the birthplace of Islam, including allowing public entertainment.
 
Isn't the market for transit passengers really saturated already? Saudis are 15 years late to the game but what helps them is a large local population absent in other Gulf countries.
 
MBS in an interview said that he does not believe in Hadith. Implying he is not a rigid fellow and hence non Muslim tourists can visit SA and have good time there.

This also means that it is okay for Muslims in SA to have temporary marriages where any guy can pay the dowry to women and marry her temporarily. Only Sunni Hadith bans it. Shia still do Mutha marriage.

MBS is giving a major facelift for Islam and trying to modernize both Islam and SA and bring them up to speed with the west. He is very young and time is on his side.
 
MBS in an interview said that he does not believe in Hadith. Implying he is not a rigid fellow and hence non Muslim tourists can visit SA and have good time there.

This also means that it is okay for Muslims in SA to have temporary marriages where any guy can pay the dowry to women and marry her temporarily. Only Sunni Hadith bans it. Shia still do Mutha marriage.

MBS is giving a major facelift for Islam and trying to modernize both Islam and SA and bring them up to speed with the west. He is very young and time is on his side.

He has effectively ended the guardianship system by allowing Saudi females to perform Hajj without a male companion. Apart from this, he has put a limit on the volume of mosques’s loudspeakers as well as introducing arts, music and theater into Saudi school curriculum.

It seems KSA is moving away from religion very quickly.
 
Huge plans afoot in Red sea and yours truly is working on some of those development plans.
Google for Exit Ventures, Six flags which are all over KSA and the Red sea developments and Neom City in particular which will be a massive tourist playground like Sharm El Shaikh
 
Isn't the market for transit passengers really saturated already? Saudis are 15 years late to the game but what helps them is a large local population absent in other Gulf countries.

Yes, I think its too late for them to catch up with Emirates or Qatar. But if they try it should mean lower prices for the rest of us.
 
MBS in an interview said that he does not believe in Hadith. Implying he is not a rigid fellow and hence non Muslim tourists can visit SA and have good time there.

This also means that it is okay for Muslims in SA to have temporary marriages where any guy can pay the dowry to women and marry her temporarily. Only Sunni Hadith bans it. Shia still do Mutha marriage.

MBS is giving a major facelift for Islam and trying to modernize both Islam and SA and bring them up to speed with the west. He is very young and time is on his side.

Islam does not need a thug like him to modernize. The entire world knows what he did to Jamal Khashoggi.
 
Islam does not need a thug like him to modernize. The entire world knows what he did to Jamal Khashoggi.

Finally someone said it.

I mean, MBS might be fairly liberal and modern in his views when compared to his predecessors, but then again his predecessors had prehistoric views and it wasn't really a big benchmark. Letting women drive and things like that should be the bare minimum for a society in the 21st century.

Are we going to ignore that this bloke chopped up a dissenting writer inside the embassy of another country just because he didn't like his views. Recently a guy who was convicted as a teen for participating in anti government protests on the streets got executed by beheading. People are talking about MBS as if he's a revolutionary leader like Mustafa Kemal or Deng Xiaoping or Lee Kuan Yew.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/opec-disagreement-lays-bare-growing-uae-saudi-economic-rivalry-2021-07-05/

Rare public disagreement between the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia over OPEC policy points to a growing economic rivalry between the two largest Arab economies which only looks set to intensify, several regional analysts said.

The UAE's opposition this weekend to a proposed eight-month extension to output curbs, favoured by Saudi Arabia, was a rare display of defiance by Abu Dhabi, whose Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan has been a staunch ally of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The disagreement led the OPEC+ talks to be called off on Monday. "The current OPEC standoff signals a wider push by the UAE to assert its economic and national self-interest vis-à-vis Saudi Arabia," said Amir Khan, senior economist at Saudi National Bank.

The alliance between the young ambitious princes had propelled a hawkish foreign policy that saw them launch a military campaign in Yemen, lead an Arab boycott of Qatar and combat Islamist political groups in the Middle East and beyond.

But as Saudi Arabia tries to wean its economy off oil, it is vying with the UAE for foreign capital and talent, although economists say it will take time to truly challenge the region's business, trade and tourism hub.

"There is this creeping economic competition in the relationship between the two biggest Arab economies and the competition is bound to intensify," said Emirati political analyst Abdulkhaleq Abdulla.

"The UAE is speaking its mind ... but the relationship is strong and the leadership know how to resolve issues," he said.

The UAE foreign ministry and the Saudi government communications office did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment on their economic and political relations.

While common perceived threats from Iran and Islamist groups in the region are likely to keep a lid on political differences, analysts say, the two states are seen as likely to increasingly butt heads on matters of economic sovereignty.

Riyadh has warned foreign firms they could lose out on state contracts if they do not set up regional headquarters in the kingdom by 2024 and in another challenge to the UAE's status as the region's trade and business hub, it this week amended rules for imports from Gulf states to exclude goods made in free zones, a major driver of Dubai's economy.

Several diplomats in the region have said the UAE-Saudi alliance has gone as far as it can as national economic interests take precedence, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The first indication of a parting of ways came in 2019 when the UAE withdrew its military presence in Yemen, leaving Riyadh mired in a costly war that directly threatens its security. Abu Dhabi still maintains sway via Yemeni forces, some of whom have challenged Yemen's Saudi-backed government.

The UAE has also dragged its feet on a deal announced by Saudi Arabia in January to restore political ties with Qatar as Riyadh moved to ease friction with U.S. President Joe Biden over its human rights record and Yemen.

While the UAE last year forged ties with Israel in a move that enjoyed bipartisan support in Washington, Riyadh has by contrast made tentative moves to improve its relationship with Turkey.

But the UAE and Saudi remain bound by concern over Iran's expanding influence via regional proxies and security threats that pose a risk to their economic ambitions.

The UAE started engaging with Iran in 2019 to ease tensions after attacks on tankers in Gulf waters and on Saudi oil plants that Riyadh blamed on Tehran, a charge it denies.

The kingdom followed suit this year, launching direct talks with Tehran over Yemen where they are locked in a proxy conflict. The move came as Biden sought to revive a nuclear deal between global powers and Iran that Riyadh opposed for not tackling Iran's missile capabilities and regional activities.

"The potential U.S.-Iran detente, the energy transition, and competition in non-oil diversification makes for a particularly challenging period of divergence this time round," Hasnain Malik, head of equity strategy at Tellimer, said of Saudi-UAE relations.

Saudi National Bank's Khan said the UAE, which has invested heavily to boost oil output capacity, wants to move quickly to monetise reserves given a global push away from fossil fuels.

Saudi Arabia is in greater need of price stability to deliver on domestic mega projects that are largely being driven by its sovereign wealth fund.

"Now you can see head-to-head confrontation and the UAE is punching above its weight," one foreign diplomat in Riyadh said of the OPEC disagreement. "This is the first time the two countries exchange public and strongly worded accusations."

While economic issues could see further public disagreement, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi are expected to continue to deal more discreetly with political matters to preserve an image of unity, said British academic and Gulf expert Christopher Davidson.
 
Finally someone said it.

I mean, MBS might be fairly liberal and modern in his views when compared to his predecessors, but then again his predecessors had prehistoric views and it wasn't really a big benchmark. Letting women drive and things like that should be the bare minimum for a society in the 21st century.

Are we going to ignore that this bloke chopped up a dissenting writer inside the embassy of another country just because he didn't like his views. Recently a guy who was convicted as a teen for participating in anti government protests on the streets got executed by beheading. People are talking about MBS as if he's a revolutionary leader like Mustafa Kemal or Deng Xiaoping or Lee Kuan Yew.

So? Every leader has killed someone, Modi kills Kashmiris, Pakistan govt kill Balochis and abduct dissents, US have killed a lot of innocent children. MBS is essential for KSA and Muslims around the world since he's trying to change the perception of Islam and Muslims which has been ruined by terrorist groups and insuurgents.
 
Islam does not need a thug like him to modernize. The entire world knows what he did to Jamal Khashoggi.

Khashoggi was speaking for secularism, liberalism and minorities, it doesn't really make sense that MBS wanting to kill him while he seems to believe in the same views as him.

KSA royals are a big family with a lot of powerful religious figures.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/saudi-arabia-grants-citizenship-group-talented-expats-2021-11-15/

Saudi Arabia has granted citizenship to a group of expatriates including doctors, clerics and academics, becoming the second Gulf Arab state to introduce a formal naturalization programme for foreigners with exceptional skills this year.

The announcement follows a royal decree issued last Thursday which grants citizenship to "experts and exceptional global talents" who will contribute to the growth of the kingdom under its ambitious reform plans, state news agency SPA reported last week.

Foreigners in Saudi Arabia usually have renewable visas valid for only a few years and tied to employment.

The naturalization program will seek out individuals in Islamic scholarship, medicine, science, culture, sports and technology with a view to creating an "attractive environment" to cultivate and retain exceptional talent to help achieve Vision 2030 goals, SPA said.

Vision 2030 is a plan of reforms to create jobs and reduce the Saudi economy's dependence on oil.

According to local news reports on Monday, the group that was just naturalized includes Muslim clerics who supported some of King Salman's initiatives on religious tolerance, financial experts, medical doctors and academics who specialize in engineering, chemistry and communications.

The move comes as Saudi Arabia seeks to become a regional commercial hub and vie for foreign capital and talent.

In January, the United Arab Emirates announced a scheme that would grant citizenship to investors and other professionals including scientists, doctors and their families.

This followed a more flexible visa policy in recent years, offering longer residencies for certain types of investors, students and professionals.
 
Finally someone said it.

I mean, MBS might be fairly liberal and modern in his views when compared to his predecessors, but then again his predecessors had prehistoric views and it wasn't really a big benchmark. Letting women drive and things like that should be the bare minimum for a society in the 21st century.

Are we going to ignore that this bloke chopped up a dissenting writer inside the embassy of another country just because he didn't like his views. Recently a guy who was convicted as a teen for participating in anti government protests on the streets got executed by beheading. People are talking about MBS as if he's a revolutionary leader like Mustafa Kemal or Deng Xiaoping or Lee Kuan Yew.

MBS doesn't care about liberalism. What he cares about is firstly, keeping an iron grip on power. And after that grip has been assured, a wealthier Saudi Arabia so that he rules a wealthier nation.

Liberal ideas is what MBS spouts once is a while because he knows the West likes to hear it, and having the West as an ally strengthens his grip on power domestically. And there are useful idiots like Friedman in New York Times who will swallow whatever MBS spouts.

https://arabdigest.org/visitors/sample-newsletters/useful-idiots/
 
A court in Saudi Arabia has sentenced a prominent former imam of the Grand Mosque in Makkah to 10 years in prison after he reportedly delivered a sermon criticising mixed public gatherings.

The Specialised Criminal Appeals Court in Riyadh sentenced Sheikh Saleh al-Talib to prison after overturning a previous acquittal, Middle East Eye reported quoting US-based rights group Democracy for the Arab World Now (Dawn).

Saudi authorities first detained Talib in 2018 and gave no reason for his arrest, which came after he delivered a sermon criticising the General Entertainment Authority, a government body in charge of regulating the entertainment industry, according to activists.

He had condemned concerts and events that he said broke away from the country's religious and cultural norms.

The imam has a global following, with thousands of people watching his sermons and recitations of the Holy Quran on YouTube.

His arrest comes as Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman continues his drive to reform Saudi society and diversify the kingdom's oil-dependent economy.

Khaleej Online had reported that in his sermon, Talib, who also served as a judge in Makkah, derided the mixing of unrelated men and women at concerts and other mixed entertainment events.

Dawn, a group founded by the late journalist Jamal Khashoggi, confirmed Talib's court sentencing on Twitter.

Express Tribune
 
A court in Saudi Arabia has sentenced a prominent former imam of the Grand Mosque in Makkah to 10 years in prison after he reportedly delivered a sermon criticising mixed public gatherings.

The Specialised Criminal Appeals Court in Riyadh sentenced Sheikh Saleh al-Talib to prison after overturning a previous acquittal, Middle East Eye reported quoting US-based rights group Democracy for the Arab World Now (Dawn).

Saudi authorities first detained Talib in 2018 and gave no reason for his arrest, which came after he delivered a sermon criticising the General Entertainment Authority, a government body in charge of regulating the entertainment industry, according to activists.

He had condemned concerts and events that he said broke away from the country's religious and cultural norms.

The imam has a global following, with thousands of people watching his sermons and recitations of the Holy Quran on YouTube.

His arrest comes as Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman continues his drive to reform Saudi society and diversify the kingdom's oil-dependent economy.

Khaleej Online had reported that in his sermon, Talib, who also served as a judge in Makkah, derided the mixing of unrelated men and women at concerts and other mixed entertainment events.

Dawn, a group founded by the late journalist Jamal Khashoggi, confirmed Talib's court sentencing on Twitter.

Express Tribune

The end times are truly near.
 
A court in Saudi Arabia has sentenced a prominent former imam of the Grand Mosque in Makkah to 10 years in prison after he reportedly delivered a sermon criticising mixed public gatherings.

The Specialised Criminal Appeals Court in Riyadh sentenced Sheikh Saleh al-Talib to prison after overturning a previous acquittal, Middle East Eye reported quoting US-based rights group Democracy for the Arab World Now (Dawn).

Saudi authorities first detained Talib in 2018 and gave no reason for his arrest, which came after he delivered a sermon criticising the General Entertainment Authority, a government body in charge of regulating the entertainment industry, according to activists.

He had condemned concerts and events that he said broke away from the country's religious and cultural norms.

The imam has a global following, with thousands of people watching his sermons and recitations of the Holy Quran on YouTube.

His arrest comes as Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman continues his drive to reform Saudi society and diversify the kingdom's oil-dependent economy.

Khaleej Online had reported that in his sermon, Talib, who also served as a judge in Makkah, derided the mixing of unrelated men and women at concerts and other mixed entertainment events.

Dawn, a group founded by the late journalist Jamal Khashoggi, confirmed Talib's court sentencing on Twitter.

Express Tribune

Shocking. May Allah (SWT) preserve the shaykh and grant him justice.

MBS is the biggest fitnah Muslim world has seen in recent times.


The end times are truly near.

I wouldn't be surprised if this is the case. May Allah (SWT) protect us.
 
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