KSRelief to boost cooperation with European commission

KSRelief is committed to alleviating the suffering of needy communities.
Updated 16 December 2017
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KSRelief to boost cooperation with European commission

BRUSSELS: The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSRelief) and the European Commission for Civil Protection and Human Assistance decided to boost cooperation during talks on Friday in Brussels, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.
A KSRelief delegation led by Dr. Aqeel Al-Ghamdi, assistant secretary-general for planning and development, met with a task team of the commission in the presence of Saad bin Mohammed Al-Areefi, the permanent representative of Saudi Arabia to the EU.
The meeting was briefed on the efforts of the King Salman Center for Relief and Humanitarian Action (KSCRHA), the SPA reported.
Meanwhile, the director of a hospital in the Khormaksar district of Aden, Yemen, expressed deep gratitude for KSRelief’s support to the facility.
A KSRelief rehabilitation team on Friday inspected the hospital, reviewed its needs, and met with the director and administrative and medical staff.
The director said the visit is a positive sign of fruitful cooperation in serving the Yemeni people.
KSRelief also distributed food baskets to displaced people in Yemen’s Saada governorate and Al-Rakza camp in Marib governorate, the SPA reported.
This aid is an extension of a project to distribute 49,000 food baskets in a number of governorates in Yemen. 


Wrapping up Year of Handicrafts at AlUla’s Winter at Tantora

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Wrapping up Year of Handicrafts at AlUla’s Winter at Tantora

  • Annual festival takes place until Jan. 10

ALULA: AlUla’s Old Town has sprung into life with Winter at Tantora — the annual festival which runs until Jan. 10 — as cooler temperatures settle over the region.

The three-week event contains workshops, concerts and gastronomic experiences which have transformed the historic landscape into a vibrant cultural gathering point, catering to locals and visitors alike.

Winter at Tantora takes its name from the traditional sundial, or the tantora, once used to mark the agricultural calendar.

The actual tantora is still perched atop what is now Dar Tantora The House Hotel, which was named as one of Time magazine’s “World’s Greatest Places” in 2024.

One of the festival’s most atmospheric offerings is Shorfat Tantora, where live music fills Al-Jadidah Arts District as musicians perform from balconies, blending traditional rhythms with contemporary beats.

The open-air experience invites audiences to gather and witness music’s unifying power on Thursday and Friday nights between 8:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. It ends on Jan. 2.

Since this year’s festival also highlights Saudi Arabia’s rich artisanal heritage — in line with the Ministry of Culture’s designation of 2025 as the Year of Handicrafts — there are plenty of crafts to be seen.

The festival spirit was also reflected this week at the outdoor Thanaya venue, a short drive from Old Town, where Emirati superstar Ahlam Al-Shamsi, who is known as Ahlam, took to the stage.

Her name, which means “dream” in Arabic, felt particularly fitting as the audience was immersed in her craft on the crisp, cool night with AlUla’s ancient rock formations as a backdrop. With wind billowing over the sky, she was perhaps the brightest star of the night.

Ahlam told the crowd: “In the Year of Handicrafts we celebrate human creativity through the hands that craft and the spirit that creates.

“The weather has been chilly over the last two days, but you (the audience) radiate warmth.”

With craft stations and food trucks nearby, Ahlam represented a modern twist weaved into the ongoing oral storytelling tradition.

Back in Old Town, people enjoyed the Art Walk tour and snaked through the labyrinth of painted mudbrick homes, murals and traditions while being guided by a local storyteller.

The Old Town Culinary Voyage merges storytelling and tasting. It spotlights traditional flavors and culture through aromas, spices and tastings.

Walking through the dusty, uneven rocky ground, visitors come across the ancient “Incense Road,” a well-known trade route central to pre-Islamic history and a main stage for global exchange.

A key stop in a network of ancient caravan routes, the road connected southern parts of Arabia, where frankincense and myrrh were produced, to the Mediterranean world.

These routes made incense one of the most valuable commodities of the ancient world. Parts of the route are now UNESCO World Heritage Sites.