黑料社区

Mayors set out real estate and infrastructure opportunities in Asir and Makkah聽

Mayors set out real estate and infrastructure opportunities in Asir and Makkah聽
Abdullah Al-Jali and Musad Al-Daood appeared on a panel at the Real Estate Future Forum in Riyadh. Screenshot
Updated 28 January 2025

Mayors set out real estate and infrastructure opportunities in Asir and Makkah聽

Mayors set out real estate and infrastructure opportunities in Asir and Makkah聽

RIYADH: 黑料社区 is accelerating its real estate and infrastructure development efforts to meet growing demand and improve the quality of life in key regions, including Asir and Makkah, according to top officials.聽

These initiatives, in line with Vision 2030, aim to boost tourism, attract investments, and improve livability for residents and visitors.

During a panel at the Real Estate Future Forum in Riyadh, Abdullah Al-Jali and Musad Al-Daood, mayors of the Asir region and Makkah, respectively, outlined their municipalities鈥 strategies to address these objectives.聽

Al-Jali emphasized the untapped potential in the Asir region鈥檚 real estate market, saying: 鈥淐urrently, 90 percent of the real estate market is concentrated in Riyadh, Jeddah, and other major cities, leaving the remaining regions with just 10 percent of the market share.鈥澛

He added: 鈥淲hat we are witnessing today is a growing opportunity driven by the increasing demand for tourism in the Asir region.聽

鈥淭his surge in demand is putting significant pressure on the real estate market, both now and for the future.鈥澛

The Asir region mayor stressed the need to attract more investments over the next few years to meet this rising demand.

Highlighting the municipality鈥檚 role, Al-Jali underlined its efforts to facilitate infrastructure and real estate development.聽

鈥淎s a municipality, we act as the main enabler for infrastructure development. We provide approvals for real estate investments, construction plans, and land use while also overseeing route clustering and road development,鈥 he explained.聽

To support the region鈥檚 real estate goals, Al-Jali invited investors to explore opportunities in Asir.聽

鈥淲e can facilitate your investment and enable you from the very first phase,鈥 he said, pointing to mixed-use projects in the pipeline and housing developments aimed at both locals and international buyers seeking summer homes.聽

Al-Jali also addressed broader challenges, such as waste management and visual distortion, calling for greater collaboration.聽

鈥淢anaging visual distortion is not an easy objective to achieve, and Riyadh is currently ahead of us in that regard,鈥 he said.聽

He urged citizens and stakeholders to support waste management efforts, emphasizing that maintaining public spaces should be treated as a collective responsibility.聽

Makkah鈥檚 mayor Al-Daood highlighted the unique challenges and opportunities facing the holy city, which hosts millions of religious tourists annually.聽

鈥淲e are focused on developing the infrastructure of Holy Makkah and equipping the city with the necessary facilities to support its unique religious significance as it welcomes millions of religious tourists from around the world,鈥 he said.聽

鈥淲e have directives from his royal highness, the crown prince, to combat visual distortion and enhance the cleanliness of the city, particularly in Makkah, to align with our new strategy,鈥 he added.聽

Al-Daood emphasized the importance of having a framework to meet the demands of Makkah鈥檚 1.5 million annual pilgrims during the peak season.聽

鈥淲e continuously plan ahead to address the growing demand and ensure the effective management of the large masses of visitors. This involves increasing our planning efforts and working closely with our partners and stakeholders,鈥 he explained.聽

In addition to its religious role, Al-Daood noted that Makkah is home to 2 million residents, necessitating investment in healthcare and entertainment infrastructure.聽

鈥淲ith 2 million citizens living in the city, it is essential to provide facilities for entertainment as well. Yes, Makkah has a strong religious identity that prevails, but that does not mean our citizens do not deserve a great quality of life,鈥 he said.聽


Teaching machines to speak Arabic

Teaching machines to speak Arabic
Updated 06 November 2025

Teaching machines to speak Arabic

Teaching machines to speak Arabic
  • Innovation is helping AI understand the region鈥檚 language, culture, and voice

JEDDAH: As developers across the Arab world work to formalize Arabic for artificial intelligence 鈥 grappling with its many dialects, limited datasets, and deep cultural nuance 鈥 English-based AI systems have continued to surge ahead. Now, industry experts say it鈥檚 time for Arabic users to gain the same technological momentum.

The performance gap between Arabic and English natural language processing is most visible in speech recognition, where pronunciation, rhythm, and vocabulary differ sharply across dialects. These variations make it challenging for one model to understand spoken Arabic with consistent accuracy.

Despite these hurdles, progress is accelerating. With rising investment and government-backed initiatives led by 黑料社区 and other regional powers, Arabic AI is steadily closing in on English in sophistication and accessibility.

As Arabic AI evolves, experts emphasize the importance of cultural nuance and dialect diversity in future language models. (aramcoworld.com)

Amsal Kapetanovic, head of KSA at Infobip, told Arab News: 鈥淲hile written NLP tasks like basic chatbots can be managed with additional work, speech recognition really exposes the limitations of current models. It requires even more fine-tuning and adaptation to handle the diversity of spoken Arabic effectively. This is where the gap between Arabic and English NLP is most pronounced.鈥

Infobip鈥檚 recent collaborations with telecom and private sector partners across the Gulf reveal a similar pattern: Arabic chatbots and virtual assistants often require greater oversight in their early stages than English systems. However, once they are retrained using region-specific conversational data and Gulf dialects, both accuracy and customer satisfaction rise sharply.

Arabic remains one of AI鈥檚 greatest linguistic challenges. Unlike English, it is not a single unified language but a family of dialects stretching from Asia to Africa. Its complex morphology 鈥 with prefixes, suffixes, gender and number agreement, and the absence of short-vowel diacritics 鈥 poses major obstacles for tokenization and model training.

Opinion

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Kapetanovic referenced a 2025 study published in JMIR Medical Informatics (鈥淚nfectA-Chat: An Arabic Large Language Model for Infectious Diseases鈥), which tested instruction-tuned models like GPT-4 in both English and Arabic. The research found that Arabic models still trail English by 10鈥20 percent in complex tasks.

鈥淎rabic models still lag slightly behind English ones, particularly in areas like accuracy and sentiment analysis,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is primarily due to the smaller size of Arabic training datasets and the complexity of Arabic dialects.鈥

He added: 鈥淎rabic itself is a family of languages and dialects 鈥 much richer and more complex than many others. This diversity adds another layer of challenge.鈥

Amsal Kapetanovi膰, head of KSA unit at Infobip. (Supplied)

Yet optimism remains strong. 鈥淭he good news is that there is significant investment happening, especially in the MENA region, with countries like 黑料社区 leading the way,鈥 Kapetanovic said. 鈥淚nitiatives like Vision 2030 are accelerating progress, and we鈥檙e seeing more focus on localizing AI for Arabic speakers.鈥

Speech recognition continues to represent the most visible gap. 鈥淎 Lebanese speaker and a Saudi speaker might use different words and speak at different speeds, making it challenging for a single model to recognize and process spoken Arabic accurately,鈥 he said.

Localization, Kapetanovic explained, extends far beyond translation. 鈥淎t Infobip, we are defining the evolution of communications in co-creation with our customers and partners throughout the region. Gartner has recognized us as a Leader in their 2025 Magic Quadrant for CPaaS. We are committed to delivering the next generation of AI-powered customer conversations to unlock seamless, high-impact engagement for MENA businesses. That鈥檚 why we put a strong emphasis on localizing our AI-driven platforms and tools to serve Arabic-speaking users effectively.鈥

Technical, cultural, and ethical challenges shape the future of Arabic AI, as developers strive for inclusion and linguistic parity. (aramcoworld.com)

Real-world applications are already bearing fruit. 鈥淔or example, Nissan 黑料社区 rolled out a WhatsApp chatbot (鈥楰aito鈥) that handles customer queries in both Arabic and English,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese bots leverage Infobip鈥檚 Answers platform, which includes built-in NLP capabilities for Arabic 鈥 such as right-to-left text support and Arabic stop-word recognition 鈥 to interpret queries and intent.鈥

鈥淔or 黑料社区 and the Gulf, we鈥檝e gone beyond simple translation by implementing features and partnerships tailored to the region,鈥 he continued.
鈥淲e鈥檝e partnered with Lucidia, a leading Saudi tech company, to co-develop solutions that address local business needs and integrate with popular regional channels like WhatsApp and X.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檝e also built language models that recognize Gulf-specific dialects and cultural expressions, making our chatbots and automation tools more intuitive for users. Additionally, our platform supports local payment integrations and business workflows unique to the region. These initiatives reflect our commitment to delivering genuinely localized technology, not just Arabic language support.鈥

DID YOU KNOW?

鈥 黑料社区 is leading investment in Arabic AI, with Vision 2030 initiatives.

鈥 AI can become biased and exclusionary if it does not speak or understand Arabic well.

鈥 Infobip鈥檚 Arabic chatbots now 鈥榯hink鈥 in Gulf dialects, improving accuracy.

Cultural understanding, he added, is key to truly human-like AI. 鈥淐ulturally aware AI should ideally be AI that understands the why behind the what,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about deep research and understanding the background 鈥 not just giving straight answers to straight questions.鈥

鈥淎t Infobip, we integrate with multiple large language models and do so in an agnostic way,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e combine them and see which ones serve which purpose, giving us the flexibility to avoid pitfalls like AI hallucination or unwanted replies.鈥

The ethics of language and inclusion

Kapetanovic cautioned that neglecting Arabic in AI development poses not only technical risks but ethical ones.

鈥淭he ethical risk is that AI can become biased and exclusionary if it doesn鈥檛 speak or understand Arabic well,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f AI systems don鈥檛 handle certain languages or dialects properly, or if they lack enough regional data, they can exclude parts of the narrative or reinforce bias.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 essential for everyone in the AI ecosystem to contribute to making AI as inclusive and democratized as possible. Otherwise, we risk reinforcing disparities in services, information, and opportunities.鈥