Muhammad Yunus: Microcredit has big role

Muhammad Yunus
Updated 16 November 2016
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Muhammad Yunus: Microcredit has big role

RIYADH: Nobel Peace Prize winner Professor Muhammad Yunus advised youths not to run after jobs after graduation but to prepare themselves for a career in social businesses.
Yunus is known throughout the world as a pioneer of the microcredit concept that uses small loans made at affordable interest rates to transform the lives of impoverished people, mostly women. The founder of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, Yunus and Grameen were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006.
The Nobel laureate was speaking on “Unpacking global citizenship: Decision making challenges” at the Four Seasons Hotel on Tuesday at the MiSK Global Forum.
“To develop a successful business, we need only young people and technology,” he said, adding that everyone can be an entrepreneur.
The Micro-finance pioneer Yunus further stressed that youth and technology can solve the problems of poverty.
“You decide what’s the destination in your life, then you work for it,” he said.
“Problems are common – there’s unemployment, poverty, old age, single mothers, welfare, healthcare. There’s a common thread,” Yunus said.
Those common problems can all be combatted through the creation and maintenance of social businesses. Social businesses are cause-driven businesses that are created to solve social issues such as poverty. The social business model, as conceived by Yunus, is designed for the investor/owner to gradually recoup the money invested but not reap a profit.
During his speech, Yunus shared with the audience how he started the Grameen Bank in a village and helped women to start social businesses in 1976.
“At the time there was no collateral and no document for the loans given but there was trust between the two parties,” he said, pointing out that now there are some nine million beneficiaries with a rolling capital of $1.5 billion in his country.
His first was through creating microcredit by loaning poor people small amounts of money.
It began in a tiny village near the university where he was teaching.
During a famine, Yunus walked the village trying to make himself useful to the people and got his idea to loan small amounts of money so the people wouldn’t have to borrow from loan sharks.
He said that there are 18 such banks in the United States, including eight in the city of New York. There are some 85,000 borrowers and the repayment rate is 99.5 percent, he added.
He insisted that poverty is not the fault of the people, it is the fault of the system.
Yunus’ efforts to combine business with selflessness earned him the Nobel Peace Prize, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Eisenhower Medal for Leadership and Service and other awards.


Conjoined twins from Pakistan arrive in Saudi Arabia for separation surgery assessment

Updated 23 February 2026
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Conjoined twins from Pakistan arrive in Saudi Arabia for separation surgery assessment

  • Sufyan and Yusuf were taken to King Abdullah Specialized Children’s Hospital in Riyadh for evaluation by specialist team led by Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah
  • They flew to Saudi Arabia under directives from King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

RIYADH: Conjoined twins from Pakistan arrived in Saudi Arabia on Monday for an assessment of the possibility of separation surgery.

Sufyan and Yusuf and their parents were taken from King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh to King Abdullah Specialized Children’s Hospital, which operates under the Saudi Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, where the twins’ condition will be evaluated.

They were flown to Saudi Arabia under directives from King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The twins’ family expressed their gratitude to the Saudi leadership and people for the warm welcome and prompt response to their case, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, head of the medical and surgical team at the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program, also thanked the Saudi leadership for the humanitarian initiative.

His team’s expertise in conjoined twin separation surgeries has helped establish the Kingdom as a global leader in the field and a beacon of hope for families seeking treatment, the SPA added.