Suhail Nights Festival begins in Northern Borders /node/2614299/saudi-arabia
Suhail Nights Festival begins in Northern Borders
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The festival is a cultural and heritage event that goes beyond mere entertainment. (SPA)
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The festival is a cultural and heritage event that goes beyond mere entertainment. (SPA)
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The festival is a cultural and heritage event that goes beyond mere entertainment. (SPA)
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The festival is a cultural and heritage event that goes beyond mere entertainment. (SPA)
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Updated 26 sec ago
SPA
Suhail Nights Festival begins in Northern Borders
The festival offers a diverse range of entertainment: sports programs, folklore shows, handicraft exhibitions, an open theater, a children’s theater, sports tournaments, international bazaars, restaurants, and various recreational games
Updated 26 sec ago
SPA
RIYADH: The Northern Borders Region has experienced exceptional weather for the launch of the Suhail Nights Festival, an event which represents the deep relationship between the local community and the Suhail star.
The star’s appearance has long been a part of the area’s heritage as it heralds the beginning of the autumn season, moderate weather, and the promise of rain, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
The festival is a cultural and heritage event that goes beyond mere entertainment. It combines authenticity with modernity, documenting the long-standing relationship between generations and the customs of fathers and grandfathers who used the rising of Suhail as a guide in their daily lives.
The festival offers a diverse range of entertainment: sports programs, folklore shows, handicraft exhibitions, an open theater, a children’s theater, sports tournaments, international bazaars, restaurants, and various recreational games.
The event, which is organized by the Northern Borders Chamber in cooperation with several government and private entities, runs until Sept. 13.
Reflecting the growing cultural and tourism activity in the region, Suhail Nights is a seasonal event combining entertainment and knowledge. It deepens pride in national heritage.
Tagged Eurasian griffon vultures at Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve. (Supplied)
Updated 15 sec ago
Arab News
Eurasian griffon vultures’ 245,000km journey underlines need for conservation
In winter 2023, the vulture returned to southwestern ֱ, travelling via the reserve, and then in spring 2024 migrated north where it has since remained in the mountains of Armenia and Azerbaijan
Updated 15 sec ago
Arab News
RIYADH: Two endangered Eurasian griffon vultures, satellite tagged and released by Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve, have traveled 245,632 kilometres, through eight countries, in the past 29 months.
This real-time data is the first of its kind in ֱ. Released for International Vulture Awareness Day it raises awareness of the global conservation crisis facing vultures and reinforces the need for cross-border conservation co-operation to ensure the species’ survival.
The vultures were released on April 3, 2023. The first vulture has journeyed 119,499km to date from the reserve in northwest ֱ, through Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Iran.
Tagged Eurasian griffon vultures at Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve. (Supplied)
In winter 2023, the vulture returned to southwestern ֱ, travelling via the reserve, and then in spring 2024 migrated north where it has since remained in the mountains of Armenia and Azerbaijan.
To date it has reached altitudes of 6,527m above sea level, speeds of 123kph and experienced air temperatures ranging from 9C to 54C.
The second bird flew from the reserve to Iraq, reaching a maximum altitude of 9,029m above sea level (that is three times the altitude of a light aircraft) and a maximum flight speed of 128kph, before settling in Turkey and Iran.
The satellite tags provide real-time data on migration routes, utilisation of habitats, critical stopover points, and congregation areas. (Supplied)
It has travelled 126,133 km to date, traversing ֱ, Jordan, Iraq, Turkey and Iran.
These behaviors show that individuals of the same species can behave very differently, some migrating and others becoming resident, indicating the need for different management strategies.
“This tracking data represents the first comprehensive study of Eurasian griffon vulture movements in ֱ and beyond, providing real-time baseline information that was previously unavailable to conservationists,” said Andrew Zaloumis, CEO of Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve.
“The data reveals these birds have traveled the equivalent of six circumnavigations around the Earth in less than 2.5 years — an incredible distance that underscores the opportunity and urgent need for regional conservation strategies to ensure their long-term survival.
“At a time when the IUCN is reporting that 16 of the world’s 23 vulture species are at risk of extinction, migratory bird populations must be managed as meta-populations across borders if we are to secure their future.”
The reserve fitted solar-powered satellite transmitters to both birds to monitor dispersal and migration patterns after release.
The satellite tags will fall off after about 3 years, when the Teflon tape holding them naturally decomposes.
The birds were tagged as part of the reserve’s efforts to understand the movement of large migratory species, specifically throughout ֱ, where little information exists.
The satellite tags provide real-time data on migration routes, utilisation of habitats, critical stopover points, and congregation areas. This information is critical to filling knowledge gaps in the movements of vultures, throughout the reserve, and regionally.
Vultures face a global conservation crisis. Despite their essential role in maintaining ecosystem health and preventing disease outbreaks by acting as nature's “clean-up crew,” all vulture species are now classified as threatened on the regional IUCN Red List.
Highly susceptible to poisoning, both intentional and accidental, vultures are also under threat from habitat loss, illegal poaching for trade, and electrocution from power lines.
Thanks to this data, the reserve can inform and implement management strategies.
The tagged birds provided information on the presence of resident and migratory vultures which then aided in the reserve monitoring program focussing and targeting specific locations in the reserve.
As a result, the reserve monitors the habitat of tagged and untagged vulture populations, and their habitats are afforded the highest level of protection under the reserve’s zonation plan.
The discovery in September 2024 of four active Eurasian griffon vulture nests in three separate breeding colonies is testament to the reserve’s conservation work and role as a sanctuary for the Kingdom’s natural heritage.
The reserve is committed to sharing its findings with the local and global scientific and conservation community and has published eight peer-reviewed papers to date with five more in drafting.
Through ֱ’s commitment, alongside 132 other countries, to the Convention on Migratory Species, which promotes the conservation of migratory animals and their habitats across national borders, more than 150 species are registered, including Griffon vultures.
This new data can globally aid in the research to secure and support migratory species through contributions to species-specific action plans, working groups and regional assessments.
Through collaboration with global organisations such as BirdLife International, this data can facilitate the establishment of Important Bird Areas or Protected Areas and inform local and regional conservation strategies with fellow royal reserves, protected areas and regional conservation partners.
Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve, one of eight royal reserves, stretches from the lava plains of the Harrat to the Red Sea in the west, connecting Neom, Red Sea Global, and AlUla. It is home to the Public Investment Fund’s Wadi Al-Disah project and Red Sea Global’s Destination AMAALA.
The meeting was part of the prince’s official visit to France to enhance the existing cultural cooperation between the two countries
Updated 19 sec ago
Arab News
PARIS: Saudi Minister of Culture Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan met the French Minister of Culture Rachida Dati on Thursday at the Palace of Versailles, on the sidelines of the Orchestral Masterpieces Concert.
The meeting was part of the prince’s official visit to France to enhance the existing cultural cooperation between the two countries, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
The parties signed an executive program for cultural cooperation between the Ministry of Culture and the Grand Palace, represented by the French Ministry of Culture.
The meeting addressed cultural relations in various sectors, most notably music, films, heritage, museums, fashion, libraries, theater and performing arts, and visual arts, and included the activation of the executive program between the Film Commission and the French National Center for Cinema and the Moving Image in developing educational methods for filmmaking.
The King Fahd Complex for the Printing of the Holy Qur’an in Madinah is one of the world’s most prominent Islamic institutions in the field of printing the Qur’an
Updated 34 sec ago
Arab News
RIYADH: The Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Dawah and Guidance’s booth at the Kingdom of ֱ’s pavilion at the 38th Moscow International Book Fair 2025 displayed the Kingdom’s efforts to serve the Qur’an and disseminate it globally, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Thursday.
The exhibition showed the role of the King Fahd Complex for the Printing of the Holy Qur’an in Madinah and the copies and translations it issues.
Visitors to the exhibition viewed copies of the Qur’an issued by the complex in various sizes, along with translations of its meanings into more than 77 languages.
Visitors to the exhibition viewed copies of the Qur’an issued by the complex in various sizes, along with translations of its meanings into more than 77 languages. (SPA)
An introductory presentation explained the printing process and the modern technical stages the Qur’an goes through at the complex, ensuring high quality in its editions and outstanding accuracy in printing.
This reflects the Kingdom’s care for the Qur’an and its service through printing and translation in numerous languages, enabling it to reach Muslims and non-Arabic speakers around the world.
The King Fahd Complex for the Printing of the Holy Qur’an in Madinah is one of the world’s most prominent Islamic institutions in the field of printing the Qur’an. It prints and distributes millions of copies annually, making them available to Muslims on all continents.
The ministry’s participation in this exhibition embodies its active role in spreading the principles of moderation and balance through books, writing, and publishing, and to enhance the Kingdom’s global standing in supporting Islamic values and spreading its message in serving Islam and Muslims.
The exhibition, which started on Sept. 3, will run until Sept. 7.
Saudi leadership sends condolences to Portugal over Lisbon funicular tragedy
Accident in the Portuguese capital resulted in multiple deaths and injuries
Updated 05 September 2025
RIYADH: King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Friday sent separate cables of condolences to Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa following the fatal derailment of a mountain funicular in Lisbon.
King Salman expressed his “deepest condolences and sincere sympathy” to President Rebelo de Sousa, the families of the victims, and the Portuguese people, while wishing the injured a speedy recovery.
The crown prince echoed those sentiments in his message, extending his condolences to the president and the families of the deceased, and wishing a swift recovery for those injured.
Total lunar eclipse visible in Kingdom’s skies on Sunday
The phenomenon will also be seen in much of Asia and Africa
Viewers in the Kingdom will be able to observe the eclipse starting at 6:27 p.m. KSA time
Updated 05 September 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: On Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025, the skies above ֱ will feature a total lunar eclipse, fully visible across the Kingdom.
The phenomenon will also be seen in much of Asia and Africa, as well as parts of Australia and Europe. It will last for about 83 minutes and will rank among the longest total lunar eclipses in recent years, offering observers a rare and remarkable celestial event.
Viewers in the Kingdom will be able to observe the eclipse starting at 6:27 p.m. KSA time, when the moon first enters the penumbral shadow. The partial phase begins at 7:27 p.m., followed by the total eclipse at 8:30 p.m., which will last until 9:53 p.m. The entire eclipse concludes at 11:57 p.m.
Zaki Al-Mostafa, a researcher at the Space Research Institute at King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, explained that a lunar eclipse occurs when the Earth comes between the sun and the moon, casting its shadow over the moon and causing it to darken.
He said that a total lunar eclipse occurs when the entire near side of the moon passes fully into Earth’s shadow. Unlike solar eclipses, which can only be observed from relatively small areas of the globe and last just a few minutes, total lunar eclipses can be seen from anywhere on Earth’s night side and may last for up to two hours.
Al-Mostafa added that “each lunar eclipse is usually followed by a solar eclipse, though it is rare for them to occur consecutively. A partial solar eclipse is expected on September 21, 2025, but it will not be visible from the Kingdom.”
Al-Mostafa said that KACST, as a national laboratory, is committed to monitoring astronomical phenomena such as solar and lunar eclipses, new moons, and meteor showers using state-of-the-art astronomical equipment at fixed and mobile observatories.
The institution is equipped with scientific experts to oversee all astronomical events and activities, reinforcing its status as a national reference in the field. In addition, KACST actively works to promote astronomical awareness by organizing educational and interactive programs for the public, fostering greater interest and engagement in astronomy.