Saudi Border Guards foil infiltration attempts of 3,680 people in a week

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Updated 10 October 2017
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Saudi Border Guards foil infiltration attempts of 3,680 people in a week

JEDDAH: Saudi Border Guards stationed in the border areas between Saudi Arabia and Yemen foiled the infiltration of 3,680 people across the Saudi-Yemeni border since the beginning of October.
Border Guard's spokesman Colonel Saher bin Mohammed Al-Harbi said that the "Border Guards in the southern regions had managed from the beginning of October till Sunday to thwart several attempts to cross the borders of the kingdom."
This comes as a continuation of the Border Guards commitment in addressing all attempts to penetrate and cross the borders of the Kingdom by illegal means, he added.
He pointed out that "groups of people were spotted coming from Yemeni territories, trying to mislead through the use of natural barriers in an attempt to hide from the eyes of border guards and illegally enter the country. This necessitated dealing with them according to the circumstances of the situation."
This resulted in the arrest of 3,680 people of different nationalities.
All security procedures and border security system and its executive regulations were implemented against the arrested persons in cooperation with the other security authorities.
Al-Harbi confirmed that "Border Guards will strike with an iron hand against anyone trying to bypass or help those people to illegally enter the Saudi borders and will counter all attempts of smuggling and infiltration across the borders."
He also stressed that they are determined to protect the kingdom's land and sea borders from all what is aimed at its security, stability and capabilities and will keep protecting it from those who try to harm the country.


Tech executive highlights importance of localizing Saudi Arabia’s AI infrastructure

Updated 8 sec ago
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Tech executive highlights importance of localizing Saudi Arabia’s AI infrastructure

  • Lawrence Yu: Our investment in Saudi Arabia is built around concrete commitments, such as $2 billion strategic investment from Alat
  • Lawrence Yu: If your data centers, servers, and equipment are built and operated in Saudi Arabia, your AI remains yours. It’s secure, inspectable, and fully under local control

RIYADH: Artificial intelligence and data sovereignty took center stage at a Riyadh event on Tuesday, highlighting Saudi Arabia’s push toward locally built digital infrastructure.

Lawrence Yu, head of MEA regional headquarters Saudi Arabia, told Arab News at Lenovo Tech World that the company’s expansion in the Kingdom is supported by long‑term commitments focused on localization and capability building.

The headquarters will be located in Al-Majdoul Tower in Riyadh.

“Our investment in Saudi Arabia is built around concrete commitments, such as $2 billion strategic investment from Alat,” Yu said.

He added that this includes the hiring and training of 100 Saudi engineers, and the launch of a first‑of‑its‑kind manufacturing facility scheduled to open in mid‑2026.

“If your data centers, servers, and equipment are built and operated in Saudi Arabia, your AI remains yours. It’s secure, inspectable, and fully under local control.”

Yu said localizing AI infrastructure is increasingly important as governments and enterprises seek greater ownership of sensitive data and national digital systems.

These initiatives underpin the establishment of Lenovo’s regional headquarters in Riyadh, which will oversee operations across the Middle East and Africa.

Yu added that beyond infrastructure, Saudi Arabia is being positioned as a producer rather than a consumer of advanced technology, helping reshape what “Made in Saudi” represents globally.

“Saudi Arabia should be known for designing, creating and producing world‑class technology,” Yu said.

“When people use a product made here, by Saudi nationals, it changes the perception of the country.”

A central theme of Lenovo Tech World was AI readiness, particularly the need for physical infrastructure capable of supporting large‑scale deployment across government and enterprise sectors.

Yu said that while AI is often discussed in terms of software, its success ultimately depends on advanced hardware that can keep pace with rapid technological change.

“AI does not just work on its own. It needs hardware, and that hardware must continuously evolve with the technology,” he said.

Reliance on outdated or externally hosted infrastructure can limit performance, security, and long‑term sustainability, added Yu.

Locally available infrastructure allows organizations to upgrade systems faster, operate at scale, and retain control over critical workloads.

Producing AI-ready PCs and AI-ready servers in the Kingdom supports Saudi Arabia’s ambition to build sovereign AI capabilities and ensures that national AI initiatives are powered by future-ready infrastructure aligned with Vision 2030.

Yu said collaboration with the Ministry of Investment and Alat has been instrumental in enabling localization and alignment with national priorities.

Lenovo’s upcoming factory in the Special Integrated Logistics Zone near King Khalid International Airport is expected to open in mid‑2026 and will support advanced manufacturing and AI‑ready infrastructure development in the Kingdom.

Reflecting on Saudi Arabia’s technology transformation, Yu said long‑term success depends on clear strategy, strong partnerships, and disciplined execution.

“To make Vision 2030 real, you need strategy, trusted partners, and execution,” Yu said.