Saudi foreign minister discusses Gaza with EU’s Josep Borrell

Saudi foreign minister discusses Gaza with EU’s Josep Borrell
Saudi foreign minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan met with the European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell in Munich. (SPA)
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Updated 18 February 2024
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Saudi foreign minister discusses Gaza with EU’s Josep Borrell

Saudi foreign minister discusses Gaza with EU’s Josep Borrell

MUNICH: Saudi foreign minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan met with the European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell on Saturday, on the sidelines of Munich Security Conference.

The officials discussed the latest developments in the Gaza Strip and its surrounding areas, and the international efforts being made to end the war.

They also reviewed international and regional issues.

Prince Faisal also discussed bilateral ties with his Kuwaiti counterpart Abdullah Ali Al-Yahya and Iraqi counterpart Fuad Mohammed Hussein.


First international flight takes off for Muscat from Pakistan’s Gwadar airport

First international flight takes off for Muscat from Pakistan’s Gwadar airport
Updated 17 sec ago
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First international flight takes off for Muscat from Pakistan’s Gwadar airport

First international flight takes off for Muscat from Pakistan’s Gwadar airport
  • China-funded airport opened for commercial operations on Monday after months-long delay
  • Opening in August of $246 million airport postponed due to security fears after separatist attacks

KARACHI: The first international flight took off for Muscat from the China-funded Gwadar airport on Friday with 39 passengers aboard, just days after the facility in southwestern Pakistan began commercial operations after a months-long delay.

A security review, prompted by a string of deadly attacks by separatist militants in the southwestern Balochistan province in August last year, had delayed the airport’s opening to the end of 2024 from Aug. 14. The airport was then due to begin operations on Jan. 10 but finally opened this Monday as a Pakistan International Airlines flight arrived from the southern port city of Karachi.

Pakistan hopes the $246-million Chinese-backed project, which will handle both domestic and international flights, will become one of the country’s largest airports.

“First international flight departs from New Gwadar International Airport to Muscat,” national carrier PIA, which operated the flight, said in a statement, adding that it would initially run one weekly flight to Muscat.

“PIA is committed to activating air operations across the country in line with national aspirations and public needs.”

Last month, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said the Gwadar airport would be able to handle A-380 aircraft and accommodate four million passengers annually.

The airport will eventually feature facilities like a cold storage, cargo sheds, hotels and shopping malls, with banking services arranged through the State Bank of Pakistan, according to the PM’s office. PIA has also planned to increase flights between Karachi and Gwadar to three times a week, while discussions are ongoing with private airlines and carriers from China, Oman and the United Arab Emirates to launch both domestic and international services.

China has pledged over $65 billion in infrastructure, energy and other projects in Pakistan under the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Part of President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative, the program in Pakistan is also developing a deep-water port close to the new Gwadar airport, a joint venture between Pakistan, Oman and China that is close to completion.

Although no Chinese projects were targeted in the militant attacks in August that delayed the airport’s launch, they have been frequently attacked in the past by separatists who view China as a foreign invader trying to gain control of impoverished but mineral-rich Balochistan, the site of a decades-long insurgency.

Recent attacks, including one in October 2024 in which two Chinese workers were killed in a suicide bombing in Karachi, have forced Beijing to publicly criticize Pakistan over security lapses and media has widely reported in recent months that China wants its own security forces on the ground to protect its nationals and projects, a demand Islamabad has long resisted.


Ramy Youssef’s animated series to have world premiere in Texas

Ramy Youssef’s animated series to have world premiere in Texas
Updated 2 min 45 sec ago
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Ramy Youssef’s animated series to have world premiere in Texas

Ramy Youssef’s animated series to have world premiere in Texas
  • ‘#1 Happy Family USA’ explores experiences of Muslim-American family in early 2000s

DUBAI: Egyptian American actor Ramy Youssef’s animated series “#1 Happy Family USA” will make its world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas, which runs from March 7 to 15.

The show explores the experiences of a Muslim-American family in the early 2000s.

Youssef voices Rumi Hussein, a 12-year-old boy with big dreams and a desire to fit in. Rumi, named after the 13th century poet, also has a hard time living up to the name.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by A24 (@a24)

Youssef also voices Rumi’s father, a former cardiothoracic surgeon who now runs a halal cart.

The series stars actress Alia Shawkat, who is of Iraqi, American, Irish, Italian and Norwegian descent, Egyptian-Canadian comedian Salma Hindy, US singer-actress Mandy Moore, “Ramy” actress Randa Jarrar, and US comedians Chris Redd, Akaash Singh and Whitmer Thomas.

Youssef is the co-creator of the series with US writer and TV producer Pam Brady. The pair are the executive producers of the show with Iraqi-British journalist Mona Chalabi. A24 and Amazon Studios co-produced.


Wearing the Saudi kit ‘is enough for me,’ says Al-Hilal star Majd Al-Otaibi

Wearing the Saudi kit ‘is enough for me,’ says Al-Hilal star Majd Al-Otaibi
Updated 10 min 34 sec ago
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Wearing the Saudi kit ‘is enough for me,’ says Al-Hilal star Majd Al-Otaibi

Wearing the Saudi kit ‘is enough for me,’ says Al-Hilal star Majd Al-Otaibi
  • The 18-year-old spoke to Arab News about the special bond with her father, growing up in the US and embracing football in the Kingdom

RIYADH: As Majd Al-Otaibi listened intently to the question being asked, tears began to well up in her eyes. As she started to answer, her voice broke a little.

The Al-Hilal star, who turned 18 recently, was answering a question about what it means to play for her country’s football team, to wear the legendary green kit and hear the national anthem.

She first had the honor as a 16-year-old and has established herself as one of the Kingdom’s most promising talents, ready to break down barriers and smash glass ceilings.

“Honestly, there’s tears in my eyes right now when you’re explaining this,” the eloquent Al-Otaibi told Arab News.

“I love Saudi very much, so to wear the kit for me, that’s all I need. Like, even if I’m sitting on the bench, even if I’m in the stands, it’s enough for me.”

Al-Otaibi was born into football. Her father, Fahad, played for Al-Tai in the early 2000s. And while she was too young to remember much of his career, her older sister, Najd, who plays for Al-Riyadh, was once the team’s mascot and walked onto the field holding her father’s hand.

While she lacks the memories, he is her biggest idol, and she speaks with reverence about him. “He’s my biggest inspiration,” she proclaimed proudly.

“When I first started football, he was my first coach. So even though I didn’t know anything about football, he was always there with me, he was my first coach, and obviously this made him my first inspiration, and I saw him as an amazing player.

“Every time he tried to teach me something or show me something, I would forget what he was teaching me, and I would just look at him and I’d be like ‘wow.’”

The love she feels for her father is returned in equal measure.

“The word ‘proud’ doesn’t adequately express how I feel about Majd,” Fahad was recorded as saying in a 2023 video which was produced for Saudi Arabia’s aborted bid for the 2026 AFC Women’s Asian Cup.

“The Saudi league will not be the end of our ambitions, I think she will rise to the heights of international professionalism. I have faith in her. She will succeed in ways that I was incapable of.”

With an older sister and younger brother, the Al-Otaibi family bonds are strong, but she has a special place in her heart for her father. “(He) is my best friend through football and through life in general. He’s always with me no matter what,” she said.

“I think he’s a big part of why I’m where I am today, and no matter what happens, he’s always supporting me. He’s at every single game, if he can, even the ones outside of Saudi with the under-20 national team. He’s always with me.”

That included flying all the way from Saudi Arabia to Florida during her year-long residence at the famed IMG Academy, an opportunity that arose through the increased investment in the women’s game by the Saudi Arabian Football Federation.

It was not her first experience Stateside, however, having lived in Cedar City, Utah, for almost seven years as her parents continued their studies in the US and were able to expose their children to a different culture.

“I have a whole different view of life,” she explained. “When I went to the US, I didn’t know what was my culture, or what was the American culture, or what culture I’m supposed to have, because I went at an age where I’m still learning these things.

“So when I went there, I learned their culture. I learned everything. I was enjoying my life. It was amazing. Alhamdulillah. But when you come back to Saudi and you experience the Saudi culture, and you’ve experienced the American culture, and here you see the difference, and I’m 100 percent with the Saudi culture.”

It was in America she first started playing football, for a team coached by her father. It was called the Minions, with a bright yellow kit resembling the characters from the iconic film franchise.

When her family returned home in 2019, she was 12 and uncertain about her football career. “When I first came back to Saudi, I had no idea there was women’s football,” she said.

“I had no idea. I had in my mind that I was going to come back and I was done with football, because I didn’t (know). There was nothing online, there was no social media, there was nothing to tell me if it was there.”

Her return coincided with the boom in women’s football but also the COVID-19 pandemic. “This is a good story,” she joked.

“When I first came back, there was this one team that I did tryouts for. I did one training (and) the next day coronavirus (struck), and everything was shut down. I never got to play for them.”

But it opened her eyes to what was possible, and only a few short years later she was stepping out proudly wearing the national team kit. Her rapid ascension — joining Al-Hilal in 2023 via Al-Yamamah — mirrors that of women’s football in the Kingdom overall.

So what about the future?

She dreams of being a trailblazer and playing professionally outside of Saudi Arabia. “I think this should be a goal for every young player,” she explained.

“Because to develop outside and to come back, it’s not only developing you as a player, but it’s developing your country, and it’s inspiring younger players to do this as well.

“You have a lot of examples from the men’s senior national team — Faisal Al-Ghamdi, Saud Abdulhamid — they’re representing their country very well outside, so I think this should be our inspiration, and it should be what we want.

“We would want to do it for our country as well, to represent them outside (Saudi Arabia); Europe or the US league, wherever it is, but to develop for us and for our country, I think that’s my biggest aspiration as well.”

She draws inspiration from the country hosting the 2034 FIFA World Cup. And she hopes Saudi Arabia will host a major women’s tournament, perhaps the AFC Women’s Asian Cup or even the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

“I think we will have the chance to host (the Women’s Asian Cup) one day, Inshallah, or any big tournament, World Cup, or whatever it is,” she said excitedly.

“I think Saudi is ready for this, and we need to open up the world to women’s football in Saudi.”


Pakistan, Azerbaijan finalize agreement on arms trade, defense infrastructure, intelligence sharing

Pakistan, Azerbaijan finalize agreement on arms trade, defense infrastructure, intelligence sharing
Updated 13 min 55 sec ago
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Pakistan, Azerbaijan finalize agreement on arms trade, defense infrastructure, intelligence sharing

Pakistan, Azerbaijan finalize agreement on arms trade, defense infrastructure, intelligence sharing
  • There have been a series of visits by Azerbaijani officials to Pakistan in recent months
  • Islamabad is seeking closer trade and investment ties with former Soviet republics

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Asif said on Friday Islamabad and Baku were in the process of finalizing a memorandum of agreement to enhance security ties through cooperation in arms trade, defense infrastructure and intelligence sharing.

Asif was addressing the eighth session of the Pakistan-Azerbaijan joint commission alongside Azerbaijani Defense Industry Minister Vugar Mustafayev who is visiting Islamabad. 

There have been a series of visits by Azerbaijani officials to Pakistan in recent months, as Islamabad seeks closer ties, especially in trade and investment, with former Soviet republics and Central Asian states. 

Last July, Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev visited Pakistan and announced that the two nations were working to increase bilateral trade to $2 billion.

“I’m hopeful that once we finalize our memorandums of understanding on cooperation in the field of the defense industry, we will be able to further our security ties through arms trade, defense infrastructure and sharing of intelligence,” Asif said. 

He invited Azerbaijan to join Pakistan’s Strategic Underground Gas Storage (SUGS), a critical component of energy infrastructure, and the White Oil Pipeline project that transports oil from ports to refineries and other distribution points.

Asif also suggested organizing regular trade exhibitions between the two countries to showcase local products in each other’s markets.

Last December, Pakistan waived customs and regulatory duties on imports from Azerbaijan under the Pakistan-Azerbaijan Preferential Trade Agreement. The agreement aimed to boost economic cooperation by reducing tariffs on goods like Pakistan’s sports equipment, leather, and pharmaceuticals and Azerbaijan’s oil and gas products.


Who’s who at the Diriyah Islamic Arts Biennale 

Who’s who at the Diriyah Islamic Arts Biennale 
Updated 16 min 18 sec ago
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Who’s who at the Diriyah Islamic Arts Biennale 

Who’s who at the Diriyah Islamic Arts Biennale 
  • A rundown of the artists whose work will be displayed at this year’s event, which runs until May 25 

JEDDAH: The second edition of the Diriyah Islamic Arts Biennale begins today, showcasing more than 500 “historical objects and contemporary artworks” across five exhibition halls and outdoor spaces.  

This year’s theme is “And All That Is In Between,” a phrase the organizers say “encapsulates the vast and awe-inspiring scope of God’s creation as experienced by humankind.”  

Over the next four months, the event will, according to the website, present “a profound exploration of how faith is lived, expressed, and celebrated … inviting visitors to reflect on the divine’s wonders and humankind’s connection to it.” 

 Abdelkader Benchamma's 'Au Bord des Mondes' on display at the Pompidou Center in Paris this year. (Supplied)

The biennale will include new commissions from more than 30 artists, both local and international. The most prominent Saudi artist on the roster is Ahmed Mater, who was the subject of a mid-career retrospective — “Chronicles” — at Christie’s in London last year. Participation in a biennale such as this fits with Mater’s philosophy. In 2020, he told Arab News: “I see exploration, sharing and learning between cultures as vital. Culture is about sharing and progress. It is not static; it is dynamic.”  

Mater’s fellow Saudi artist, the printmaker and educator Fatma Abdulhadi will also be presenting works at the biennale. Her prints, she told the Berlin Art Institute in 2021, consist of “layer upon layer of deeper meanings which are expressed through the use of color. Each layer of color is a mirror that allows you to see the others clearly and accept them for what they are.” 

Saudi contemporary interpretive dancer Bilal Allaf told Arab News in 2021 why he prefers his improvisational approach to classical dance. “I feel I can express my emotions better,” he said. “I think it’s a pure art form of storytelling — a form of non-verbal communication. As a performer it’s a very profound expression.” 

Bilal Allaf. (Supplied)

Bahraini-American artist Nasser Alzayani was the winner of Louvre Abu Dhabi’s inaugural Richard Mille Art Prize in 2021. His practice, the Louvre said at the time, “is a research-driven documentation of time and place through text and image.” Alzayani told Canvas the following year: “I see the work that I’m making as a way of adding to the resources available.” 

Makkah native Ahmad Angawi is, according to art collective Edge of Arabia, “inspired by the colorful diversity of the culture of Hejaz.” He is the son of an architect, and has “adopted the concept of … the belief in the fundamental principle of balance, as a state of mind, as well as the belief in its application in the field of design.” 

Abdelkader Benchamma, born in France to Algerian parents, creates “delicately executed and dynamic drawings of states of matter,” Edge of Arabia’s website states. “His drawings take their inspiration from visual scenarios that stem from reflections on space and its physical reality.” 

Abha native Saeed Gebaan is an industrial engineer by trade, and a co-founder of PHI Studio. “Through installations, programming and movement systems, Gebaan invites viewers to consider the intersection of science and society,” according to Riyadh Art. 

Nasser Alzayan, Seeing Things. (Supplied)

Louis Guillaume uses found materials to create his sculptures and “sees his creations as living works destined to evolve over time,” the website of Paris’ Cité International Des Artes states. 

The work of Lebanese multidisciplinary artists Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige has covered film, photography, sculpture, installations, performance lectures and texts. They have written that they “question storytelling, the fabrication of images and representations, the construction of imaginaries, and the writing of history.” 

Jeddah-based visual artist Bashaer Hawsawi works with mixed media and found objects. Her practice, according to theartists.net, is centered around “notions of cultural identity, cleansing, belonging and nostalgia.” 

Libyan artist Nour Jaouda, the Venice Biennale website states, “relishes in the slow, physical, and felt processes of fabricating hand-dyed textiles. (Their) inherent connectivity begets their association with the eternal and the divine; to the artist, textiles have no beginning or end.” 

Lebanese-French interdisciplinary artist Tamara Kalo was raised in Riyadh. “She works with photography, video and sculpture to investigate narratives that shape home, history and identity,” Riyadh Art states. 

Nour Jaouda's 'The Light In Between'. (Supplied)

Raya Kassisieh is a London-based artist of Palestinian heritage who says she “explores the politics of the body in a multidisciplinary practice that presents a deeply personal interrogation of form.” Her work “proposes that the body is the ultimate tool for reimagination and creation.” 

The Japanese artist Takashi Kuribayashi creates large-scale installations. The central theme of his work, he has said, is the “invisible realm” and its boundary. “The truth resides in places that are invisible. Once you are aware that there is a different world out of sight, you will be living in a different way.” 

Saudi photographer and filmmaker Hayat Osamah “seeks to challenge conventional norms and celebrate diversity,” Riyadh Art states, while Jeddah-born multidisciplinary artist Anhar Salem also works primarily in film, often using phone-shot videos “to question self-representation and image production in communities that have been marginalized as a result of migration and economic policies,” according to Cité International Des Artes. 

This year’s roster also includes Argentinian artist Gabriel Chaile; Amman-based Kuwaiti artist and curator Ala Younis; Asim Waqif, an Indian artist based in New Delhi; Taiwanese multidisciplinary artist Charwei Tsai; Lahore-based duo Ehsan ul Haq and Iqra Tanveer; Eurasian art collective Slavs and Tatars; Italian visual artist Arcangelo Sassolino; British architect and multidisciplinary artist Asif Khan; French-Iraqi artist Mehdi Moutashar; German-Iranian photographer and sculptor Timo Nasseri; Multimedia poet-musician duo Hylozic/Desires (Himali Singh Soin and David Soin Tappeser); Colombian multidisciplinary artist Nohemi Pérez; Pakistani artist Imran Qureshi, whose work is inspired by the miniature paintings of Mughal courts; Brazilian artist Lucia Koch; and the British interdisciplinary artist Osman Yousefzada.