Committee for Arab Information meets in Cairo

A relative of a Palestinian who was killed at the Israel-Gaza border cries at a hospital in the southern Gaza Strip. (Reuters)
Updated 08 May 2018
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Committee for Arab Information meets in Cairo

  • The meeting discussed the draft agenda, which included the Palestinian issue, media honor charter, the current Arab media strategy

RIYADH: The 91st session of the Standing Committee for Arab Information began on Monday in Cairo. The session was chaired by Dr. Khalid bin Abdul Qader Al-Ghamdi, chairman of the committee and the general supervisor of External Information at Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Culture and Information.

The meeting will discuss the draft agenda of the Executive Office of the Council of Arab Information Ministers at its ninth session, to be held today under the chairmanship of the Kingdom.

The meeting discussed the draft agenda, which included the Palestinian issue, media honor charter, the current Arab media strategy, and formulating a new vision in line with developments in the Arab region and the world, notably the international media plan to counter the unilateral American decision to recognize Jerusalem (Al-Quds) as the capital of Israel, in implementation of the resolutions of the recent Arab summit in the city of Dhahran in the Kingdom. The summit was renamed “the Jerusalem Summit.” 

The agenda also includes the role of the Arab media in tackling the phenomenon of terrorism, the Arab Committee for Electronic Media, as well as following up on Arab Media Action Plan abroad, the Arab Media Day and the Arab Media Excellence Award. 


Oman’s Islamic banking assets rise to $24bn on credit growth 

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Oman’s Islamic banking assets rise to $24bn on credit growth 

JEDDAH: Oman’s Islamic banking assets climbed to about 9.2 billion Omani rials ($23.9 billion) by the end of October, underscoring steady expansion in the sultanate’s financial sector as credit growth remains robust. 

Assets held by Islamic banks and Islamic windows accounted for 19.5 percent of Oman’s total banking system, up 10.8 percent from a year earlier, the Oman News Agency reported. 

Oman’s banking sector performance reflects steady progress toward Vision 2040, which prioritizes economic diversification, private sector growth, and financial resilience. 

“As for the total financing provided by institutions engaged in this activity, it also rose by 10.4 percent, reaching around 7.4 billion Omani rials,” the ONA reported, adding that deposits with Islamic banks and Islamic windows grew 11.9 percent to roughly 7.3 billion rials by the end of October. 

Rising credit flows, particularly to non-financial corporates and households, are fueling the development of small and medium-sized enterprises and domestic investment in Oman, supporting efforts to reduce reliance on hydrocarbons and build a more diversified economy. 

“Total deposits held with ODCs registered a Y-o-Y significant growth of 7 percent to reach 33.3 billion rials at the end of August 2025. Total private sector deposits increased by 7.5 percent to OMR 22.4 billion,” the Central Bank of Oman said in a statement issued in October. 

The broader banking sector also saw solid credit growth in 2025. By the end of August, total credit across commercial banks increased by 8.6 percent year on year to 34.1 billion rials, driven mainly by lending to non-financial corporates and households, which accounted for 46.7 percent and 44.7 percent of total credit, respectively. 

Private sector lending alone rose by 6.5 percent, supporting SME activity and domestic investment. 

Meanwhile, aggregate deposits at conventional banks climbed 5.5 percent to 26.1 billion rials at the end of August, with private sector deposits accounting for 67 percent, or 17.5 billion rials, of the total. 

Islamic banking entities mirrored this momentum, with total financing reaching 7.3 billion rials and deposits standing at 7.2 billion rials by the end of August, underscoring steady expansion throughout 2025. 

Islamic banking in Oman was introduced after the Central Bank of Oman issued preliminary licensing guidelines in May 2011, allowing full-fledged Islamic banks and Islamic windows to operate alongside conventional institutions. 

The framework was formalized in December 2012 through a Royal Decree amending the Banking Law, mandating Shariah supervisory boards and authorizing the central bank to establish a High Shariah Supervisory Authority.