黑料社区

KSrelief signs deal with WHO to support healthcare in earthquake-hit Syria聽

KSrelief signs deal with WHO to support healthcare in earthquake-hit Syria聽
The agreement was signed by KSrelief Supervisor-General Dr. Abdullah Al Rabeeah and WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on the sidelines of the 79th session of the UN General Assembly in New York. (SPA)
Short Url
Updated 28 September 2024

KSrelief signs deal with WHO to support healthcare in earthquake-hit Syria聽

KSrelief signs deal with WHO to support healthcare in earthquake-hit Syria聽

RIYADH: Saudi aid agency, KSrelief, signed a $4.7 million cooperation agreement on Friday with the World Health Organization (WHO) to support emergency and specialized health services in earthquake-hit areas in northwestern Syria.聽
The agreement aims to provide treatment to more than 1.2 million people, including the displaced and the host community in these areas.
The agreement targets enhancing primary, secondary, and specialized healthcare. It will also work on reducing the spread of epidemics, and provide a safe health environment for the most vulnerable.聽
Dialysis services will also be supported in 20 centers.聽
The agreement was signed by KSrelief Supervisor-General Dr. Abdullah Al Rabeeah and WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on the sidelines of the 79th session of the UN General Assembly in New York.


Upcoming Riyadh Season to feature more Saudi and Gulf content, says GEA chairman

Upcoming Riyadh Season to feature more Saudi and Gulf content, says GEA chairman
Updated 11 sec ago

Upcoming Riyadh Season to feature more Saudi and Gulf content, says GEA chairman

Upcoming Riyadh Season to feature more Saudi and Gulf content, says GEA chairman
  • The public can look forward to music concerts, football matches, boxing bouts, UFC fights, and a WWE showcase
  • First-ever Riyadh Comedy Festival to feature over 50 of the world's most renowned comedians

RIYADH: Plenty of global attractions are being planned for the upcoming Riyadh Season, with the General Entertainment Authority (GEA) promising that events will be rich in Saudi, Gulf and Syrian content as well.

GEA Chairman Turki Alalshikh on Wednesday announced the first-ever Riyadh Comedy Festival, which will take place at Boulevard City in Riyadh from September 26 to October 9. The event will feature over 50 of the world's most renowned comedians, according to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

Turki Alalshikh, adviser and chairman of the General Entertainment Authority. (SPA photo)

Following the major success of last year鈥檚 season, Riyadh is currently experiencing an unprecedented entertainment movement, such as hosting the Esports World Cup 鈥 the largest esports tournament in the world 鈥 with a prize pool exceeding $70 million and drawing significant global attention. 

Alalshikh said the season鈥檚 activities will continue to accelerate week after week.

Among the global events being lined up are music concerts, football matches, boxing bouts, UFC fights, and a WWE showcase, the GEA chief said.

Wrestling fans can look forward to the 鈥淩oyal Rumble鈥 taking place in January, the SPA quoted him as saying.

Caption

Alalshikh added that more surprises will be announced soon, including events in collaboration with global YouTube star MrBeast and the "Six Kings Slam" tennis tournament, which will bring together the world鈥檚 top six players to compete for the largest prize in the sport鈥檚 history 鈥 following the major success of last year鈥檚 edition.

Riyadh Season is an annual entertainment festival held in the Kingdom's capital, a major initiative aimed to boost tourism and diversify the Saudi economy, as part of the country's Vision 2030 initiative. 
 


National Museum summer camp inspires young Saudi creators

National Museum summer camp inspires young Saudi creators
Updated 24 July 2025

National Museum summer camp inspires young Saudi creators

National Museum summer camp inspires young Saudi creators
  • Through interactive sessions and hands-on learning across four craft tracks, participants explore 黑料社区鈥檚 rich cultural heritage

RIYADH: The National Museum鈥檚 summer camp is in its first phase, offering children aged 10-12 a range of activities that blend theory and practice.

The camp connects generations by showcasing handicrafts as both a source of national pride and a path to future economic opportunities, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Through interactive sessions and hands-on learning across four craft tracks, participants explore 黑料社区鈥檚 rich cultural heritage.

Each child designs and creates their own products, building creative and organizational skills while fostering initiative. (SPA)

Each child designs and creates their own products, building creative and organizational skills while fostering initiative, the SPA added.

The camp transforms the National Museum into a vibrant hub, aiming to instill a lifelong love of learning and creativity while developing critical thinking and design skills.

It also introduces children to handicrafts as a core part of Saudi identity and empowers them to manage small craft projects, the SPA reported.

The first phase, running through to July 31, has already attracted strong interest from families and educators. This enriching experience opens new horizons for knowledge and fosters deeper connections with national heritage, the SPA added.
 


黑料社区聽ramps up coffee production with new initiative

黑料社区聽ramps up coffee production with new initiative
Updated 23 July 2025

黑料社区聽ramps up coffee production with new initiative

黑料社区聽ramps up coffee production with new initiative
  • A new project led by Saudi Reef will plant 50,000 seedlings and boost the productivity of coffee trees by 30 percent by the end of 2025
  • Majid Al-Brikan, a spokesperson, said the initiative began with selecting six elite genetic samples from coffee trees in Jazan, Asir and Baha

JEDDAH: 黑料社区 has launched an initiative to increase high-quality coffee seedling production using tissue culture technology as part of the Kingdom鈥檚 push to develop its coffee sector and promote sustainable agriculture.

Led by the Sustainable Agricultural Rural Development Program, or Saudi Reef, in cooperation with the National Centre for Research and Development of Sustainable Agriculture, also known as Estidamah, the project will plant 50,000 seedlings and boost the productivity of coffee trees by 30 percent by the end of 2025.

Majid Al-Brikan, spokesperson for Saudi Reef, said the initiative began with selecting six elite genetic samples from coffee trees in Jazan, Asir and Baha.

These were supplied to labs, producing 17,000 somatic embryos and 4,000 plants, now undergoing the rooting phase.

So far, 1,200 plants have been transferred to greenhouse facilities for acclimatisation, and another 400 seedlings are in the hardening stage.

A bioreactor growth accelerator has also been installed to speed up production and reduce reliance on manual labor.

According to Al-Brikan, the project has yielded significant scientific breakthroughs, including the re-evaluation of 82 genetic patterns, now grouped into 12 genetic groups based on morphological similarities.

Seedlings are also being produced through cuttings of selected genotypes, with 1,000 rooted cuttings prepared to yield traceable, high-quality plants.

A key focus of the initiative is the development of disease-resistant and drought-tolerant coffee varieties, supporting the Kingdom鈥檚 goals for climate-resilient agriculture.

Fourteen knowledge-based agricultural products have also been developed to promote best practices across coffee farms.

The program includes development of a reference book for local farmers on cultivation and post-harvest practices.

To support knowledge transfer, at least 109 farmers have participated in domestic and international study tours, and more than 200 stakeholders have received training through workshops and seminars.

The program has also engaged with global coffee events to promote 黑料社区鈥檚 growing presence in the international market.
 


From expulsion to AI success 鈥 how a Saudi student鈥檚 journey is inspiring a generation

From expulsion to AI success 鈥 how a Saudi student鈥檚 journey is inspiring a generation
Updated 23 July 2025

From expulsion to AI success 鈥 how a Saudi student鈥檚 journey is inspiring a generation

From expulsion to AI success 鈥 how a Saudi student鈥檚 journey is inspiring a generation
  • Abdullah Al-Refai bounced back to work on breakthrough technology
  • 鈥楩ailure doesn鈥檛 define you 鈥 how you respond to it does,鈥 he says

ALKHOBAR: In June, a student research team at King Saud University quietly presented their breakthrough 鈥 a Saudi-built artificial intelligence agent named Mantiq.

Mantiq successfully solved 84 out of 120 abstract puzzles and scored a 70 percent accuracy rate on the global Abstraction and Reasoning Corpus benchmark in a challenge widely recognized among leading artificial general intelligence researchers around the world.

But behind the results was something just as compelling 鈥 a group of young Saudis that included a once-expelled university student who rebuilt his future line by line, code by code.

Abdullah Al-Refai, 24, is a software engineering student at Prince Mohammed Bin Fahd University in Dhahran. With no official title, no funding, and no affiliation to a major lab, he represents a growing generation determined to push boundaries in the most advanced frontiers of AI. 

鈥淲e may not have the same resources as big tech labs, but we have vision and we鈥檙e proving that brilliance can come from anywhere 鈥 even a small research group in 黑料社区,鈥 he said.

Al-Refai鈥檚 journey was far from linear; it was full of detours, setbacks and moments of deep personal doubt.

First, he enrolled at Dammam Community College, where he excelled. His performance earned him a transfer to King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, one of the top institutions in the Kingdom.

But the transition proved overwhelming. Battling depression and struggling to adjust, his grades declined and, following a difficult time, he left.

鈥淕etting expelled broke me. I felt like everything I had worked for was gone. But over time, I realized that failure doesn鈥檛 define you 鈥 how you respond to it does,鈥 said Al-Refai.

Determined not to give up, he later enrolled at Prince Mohammad Bin Fahd University, a smaller, private center, and supported himself by working at Jarir Bookstore.

As he regained his academic footing, Al-Refai rediscovered his love of technology. His coding journey had started years earlier when he received a Dell PC in sixth grade and began experimenting with Java programming to create modifications for popular video game Minecraft.

A turning point came when he started a part-time AI research role at PMU. Soon after he met his mentor, Sulaiman Ureiga, who invited him to join a student-led research group focused on AGI.

Unlike traditional AI systems, which rely on massive datasets, AGI aims to mimic human thought, reasoning and learning, and adapt with minimal input. It is a field into which tech giants like OpenAI and DeepMind have poured billions.

In 黑料社区, Al-Refai and his team are approaching the same goal with minimal resources other than passion, perseverance and belief.

Their focus has been the ARC challenge developed by Google researcher Fran莽ois Chollet, which tests a model鈥檚 ability to solve logic puzzles using abstraction, not memorization.

When the team presented the first phase of their research, an AGI-1 prototype that solved 70 percent of the test puzzles within minutes, it was a proud moment.

鈥淪tanding there at King Saud University, presenting our agent and (seeing) it solve 70 percent of the ARC-1 tasks, I knew this was bigger than a research demo. It was proof that Saudi youth can build world-class AI,鈥 said Al-Refai.

His motivation goes beyond personal achievement, however; he sees his story as a blueprint for others, proof that failure is not final and that Saudi youth can lead global conversations on AI.

His team is already working on the next phases of their research, hoping to improve the model鈥檚 reasoning capabilities and publish in an academic forum. They have also created educational posters, hosted sessions and spoken at local events to spread awareness and encourage others to explore AI.

鈥淢y dream is that when people around the world talk about the future of AI, they mention 黑料社区 鈥 not just for investments, but for real innovation and breakthroughs,鈥 said Al-Refai.

All this comes at a time when 黑料社区 is pouring historic levels of investment into emerging technologies. In May, the Kingdom announced a $600 billion strategy in AI and digital transformation, reinforcing its ambition to become a global innovation hub.

While high-level partnerships and summits dominate headlines, stories like Al-Refai鈥檚 reveal a parallel transformation, one happening from the ground up, driven by students, self-learners and quiet researchers working after hours in labs and dorm rooms.

鈥淚f I can come back from academic failure and end up contributing to AGI research, anyone can,鈥 said Al-Refai. 鈥淲e just need to believe in ourselves and build with purpose. We are capable of greatness. We always have been, and we always will be.鈥


New Arabic data governance platform to 鈥榚levate local talent,鈥 says Governata co-founder

New Arabic data governance platform to 鈥榚levate local talent,鈥 says Governata co-founder
Updated 23 July 2025

New Arabic data governance platform to 鈥榚levate local talent,鈥 says Governata co-founder

New Arabic data governance platform to 鈥榚levate local talent,鈥 says Governata co-founder
  • Governata enables companies to coordinate with the Kingdom鈥檚 National Data Management Office, or NDMO, and Saudi Data and AI Authority, or SDAIA, guidelines
  • Djamel Mohand added said that the Kingdom was leading in AI through big investments in GPU imports, local data centers and computing power capabilities

RIYADH: A newly launched platform will allow Saudi companies to align their data regulations with national AI policies, supporting local talent, according to the company鈥檚 co-founder.

Governata enables companies to coordinate with the Kingdom鈥檚 National Data Management Office, or NDMO, and Saudi Data and AI Authority, or SDAIA, guidelines.

All data remains hosted domestically to ensure compliance and cost control.

Governata co-founder, Djamel Mohand, spoke to Arab News about the company鈥檚 localization strategy.

Mohand emphasized three advantages for Saudi businesses.

First, on talent development: 鈥淭hey can leverage local talents better,鈥 he said, through locally built software that used government initiatives such as MISK and SDAIA. This enabled 鈥渢housands of homegrown data engineers, data specialists and other experts to be involved in improvement of these technologies, not only distribute global tech.鈥

Second, on organizational adoption: 鈥淭he localization aspect enables businesses to use this technology across the whole organization,鈥 which Mohand said required a high level of cultural understanding to engage multiple business owners for full impact.

Third, addressing data sovereignty, Mohand said the 鈥渓ocal closed-loop setup protects standard solutions, as hosting the data on-premises or in the local cloud has become the norm. However, this is not enough if local businesses want to ensure full data protection.鈥

Mohand added that the Kingdom was leading in AI through big investments in GPU imports, local data centers and computing power capabilities.

However, he warned: 鈥淎 bottleneck to enablement will occur if data infrastructure and company management are not aligned.鈥

Governata claims to address this challenge. Mohand said: 鈥淥ur mission is to prepare Saudi organizations to leverage all this AI power being created by the country鈥檚 leadership.

鈥淎s we elevate organizational maturity in data management, we elevate local talent,鈥 he added.

Mohand said that the platform activated 鈥渢housands of data scientists, software engineers, integration specialists, domain experts and business managers from 黑料社区鈥檚 outstanding talent pool鈥 while developing skills internally.