The Saudi Falcons Club offers accommodation and transport for falcon owners
Updated 22 October 2023
Arab News
RIYADH: Sales at the fourth Saudi Falcons Club auction exceeded SR1.6 million ($440,000) after three birds were sold for SR155,000, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Saturday.
The auction was launched at the club’s Malham headquarters near Riyadh on Oct. 1 and will continue until Nov. 15.
Two peregrine Qirnas falcons from the south of Al-Lith city sold for SR57,000 and SR33,000, while a third bird, a young falcon from Al-Wajh, sold for SR65,000.
Earlier, a peregrine falcon from Al-Awiqila in the Kingdom’s Northern Borders region stole the show at the auction, fetching a record sale price of SR250,000. Another shaheen falcon, this one from Al-Lith city in the Makkah region, sold for SR135,000.
The event aims to promote the Kingdom’s falconry heritage, and support related cultural and economic activities, organizers said, while also offering opportunities to invest in a field that helps support the development of the national economy.
During the auction, the club outlines investment in falconry in Saudi Arabia and the development of the sector, including regulations governing the buying and selling of birds.
The Saudi Falcons Club offers accommodation and transport for falcon owners, while the auction is broadcast live on television channels and the club’s social media platforms.
During the club’s first auction, in 2020, 102 falcons were sold over 20 days, with total sales exceeding SR10 million. At the second auction, 95 falcons were sold for a total of SR8.3 million, and during the third, 81 birds sold for more than SR7 million.
Saudi Arabia seeing ‘significant changes’ in women’s advancement, says Tokyo governor
Updated 7 sec ago
Arab News Japan
RIYADH: There have been “significant changes” in women’s advancement in Saudi Arabia compared to her previous visits to the Kingdom, Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said on Friday.
Speaking at Fortune Magazine’s Most Powerful Women International Summit in Riyadh, Koike said: “Whatever the gender is, the Saudi Vision 2030 transformed the country and made it comfortable for everyone, including males, females, children and the handicapped.”
The governor has visited Riyadh three times previously but expressed her appreciation that women “can drive and travel alone now.”
Koike is the first elected Tokyo governor and has been appointed three times so far. She told the Fortune panel that her priority was to make “women’s dreams come true.”
She added that free childcare, including tuition and provision of school lunches, was also high on her agenda.
Despite her focus on Tokyo, Koike said the agenda for women’s advancement should be the same in all communities, from small villages to large cities.
“It’s a common agenda we have to face whether for education, industry and for vitalizing the economy,” she said.
After her election, Koike began organizing a network for female mayors and governors.
“When I first started the network with my colleague, we only had 39 female mayors and governors elected,” she said, adding that women should “not wait” until they were elected or appointed to join: “If you don’t a buy lottery ticket, you will not win.”
“The world is so turbulent,” Koike said, adding that women should take on its challenges and achieve whatever they want.
The theme of this year’s conference is “A New Era for Business: Partnering for Global Prosperity.” Other speakers included Nigeria’s former minister of Education, Dr. Obiageli “Oby” Ezekwesili, along with Prof. Hanan Abdulraheem Alahmadi, assistant speaker of The Shura Council of Saudi Arabia, and Farah Ismail, deputy minister of sectoral and regional development of the Saudi Ministry of Economy and Planning.
How Saudi Arabia is embracing AI to drive healthier lifestyles in line with Vision 2030
From smart hospitals to intelligent PE planning, the Kingdom is harnessing tech to improve public health outcomes
King Faisal Specialist Hospital uses AI to streamline patient care and educate families on managing long-term health conditions
Updated 22 May 2025
Haifa Alshammari
RIYADH: Saudi Arabia is leveraging artificial intelligence to build a healthier, more active population — a central objective of Vision 2030, which commits to raising the quality of life for all citizens through physical wellbeing.
AI is playing a pivotal role in this national transformation, with its applications extending across the healthcare sector, educational institutions and even mobile fitness apps that support healthier daily habits.
AI applications now plays a significant role in healthcare, education and even mobile fitness apps that support healthier daily habits. (Getty Images)
One leader in this field is the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, which uses AI to streamline patient care, support post-treatment recovery and empower families through personalized health education.
“Today, we live in a golden digital innovation ecosystem in the Kingdom,” Dr. Ahmad AbuSalah, director of the Center for Healthcare Intelligence at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, told Arab News.
“It is a golden time for entrepreneurs, for innovators, for organizations and for researchers. In the hospital, we have a digital transformation journey that we take really seriously.”
Early this year, King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre in Riyadh announced that it has successfully performed a robotic-assisted implantation of an artificial heart pump (HeartMate 3) developed by Abbott. (Photo courtesy of KFSHRC)
Driven by the healthcare transformation program of Vision 2030, the hospital’s strategy focuses on lowering costs, expanding access to care and delivering outstanding services — all supported by AI.
However, Dr. AbuSalah said that adoption of these new technologies must be strategic and sustainable if they are to have the desired effect on patient outcomes and medical practice.
“Some organizations build AI models, keep it for a couple of years, and then shut it down. Why? Because it wasn’t bringing value,” he said.
One of the most impactful uses of AI at King Faisal Specialist Hospital is operation intelligence, which helps to guide the patient journey from admission to discharge. The system uses predictive analytics to inform patients about their health and encourage targeted lifestyle changes.
“We built a system that will proactively predict a patient’s experience three days before their appointment for the cancer treatment unit,” Dr. AbuSalah said.
This helps doctors anticipate outcomes, manage expectations and intervene early where needed.
Dr. Ahmad AbuSalah, director of the Center for Healthcare Intelligence at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center in Riyadh. (Supplied)
The hospital’s AI tools also alleviate administrative burden on medical staff — a major cause of burnout. “If we remove the noise around the doctor, the care quality will be enhanced by itself,” Dr. AbuSalah said.
“You always hear the term ‘physician burnout’ because they are spending a lot of time on non-clinical tasks, on documentation, submitting orders here and there, generating reports. How can they focus on patients?”
By automating those tasks, AI frees up time for direct patient care, improving both staff wellbeing and service quality.
Outside the hospital setting, the same technology is helping Saudis to make better everyday health choices. AI-enabled apps now track sleep, diet and exercise, offering personalized insights to encourage small, achievable steps — such as walking or cycling.
In fact, walking and cycling are now the most popular forms of physical activity among Saudi adults, according to a 2024 General Authority for Statistics report.
DID YOU KNOW?
• Predictive AI can forecast patient experiences before appointments, enabling more personalized treatment.
• AI-powered apps help users to track their sleep, diet and activity for smarter, healthier daily habits.
• Schools are using AI to plan tailored PE lessons, making physical activity more engaging for students.
However, the report also noted a gender gap, with 23.2 percent of men being physically active compared to just 14 percent of women.
AI could help to close that gap, offering flexible, accessible ways for women to engage in exercise from home or within their communities.
Meanwhile, in schools across the Kingdom, AI is transforming physical education by helping teachers to tailor activities to individual students’ needs. This has made PE more engaging and inclusive — and part of a broader campaign to instill lifelong habits of fitness.
Last year, the Saudi Ministry of Education added rugby as an elective sport in its physical education curriculum, as part of an effort to promote the importance of having a healthy lifestyle among children. (AFP photo)
In a landmark move last year, the Ministry of Education introduced rugby as an elective sport — an initiative that underscores the growing importance of physical activity in the national curriculum.
But technology alone is not enough. To ensure lasting impact, experts say that the Kingdom must continue investing in infrastructure, educator training and custom tools that align with Saudi culture and goals.
Through such initiatives, Saudi Arabia is turning AI into more than just a technological leap — it is becoming a public health revolution, helping the nation move, live and feel better every day.
BRUSSELS: Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, adviser at the Royal Court and supervisor general of the Saudi aid agency KSrelief, recently conducted high-level discussions with UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell during the European Humanitarian Forum in Brussels.
The meeting, which included Saudi EU Ambassador Haifa Al-Jedea, focused on joint humanitarian and relief initiatives designed to enhance child welfare programs across global crisis zones.
Russell praised the ongoing partnership between UNICEF and KSrelief, highlighting how their collaboration has successfully delivered aid to millions of vulnerable children worldwide. She described the relationship as “an outstanding example of international humanitarian cooperation dedicated to serving children globally.”
Madinah university launches ‘Legacy and Impact’ project
Updated 22 May 2025
Arab News
MADINAH: The Islamic University of Madinah has launched the “Irth Wa Athar” (Legacy and Impact) project, which aims to document its graduates’ educational impact and rectify data digitization.
The university said the initiative included documenting and rectifying graduates’ certificates from 1961-97 and collecting the data of 173,000 international scholarships offered by the university to its graduates from 179 countries since its establishment in 1961.
The international scholarships include more than 41,000 awarded to students in the fields of religious sciences, in addition to over 15,000 granted for studies in the principles and skills of Islamic preaching.
Some 27,000 scholarships were granted to students of Arabic language education, while 24,000 were offered for training specialists in other scientific fields.
RIYADH: The National Developmental Housing Corporation, or Sakan, has won the Qassim Award for Excellence and Creativity in the National Excellence Branch in its fifth session.
Yazeed Al-Rasheed, vice president for shared services at Sakan, received the award on behalf of the organization. He expressed his gratitude to officials for their support and recognition of national initiatives, saying that this was an incentive to continue efforts in cooperation with all parties.
Abdulaziz Al-Karidis, secretary-general of Sakan, thanked the Qassim governor for his support for Sakan’s initiatives and for following up and encouraging activities that achieved the foundation’s goals. Receiving the award would inspire the foundation to further enhance its performance and reinforce its core values, he said.
The win marks a milestone in the foundation’s journey and its commitment to excellence and innovation. The foundation continues to strive toward creating a positive and sustainable impact in the developmental housing sector by offering the best solutions and practices.