Labor court in Riyadh announces ruling to pay delayed salaries to nurse

Labor courts in Saudi Arabia were officially launched last month in order to help organize and support the workforce inside the Kingdom. (Supplied)
Updated 25 December 2018
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Labor court in Riyadh announces ruling to pay delayed salaries to nurse

  • The court announced the rulings after several hearings as the defendant failed to make an appearance at the court despite the several notification messages
  • Labor courts in Saudi Arabia were officially launched last month in order to help organize and support the workforce inside the Kingdom

RIYADH: The labor court in Riyadh announced a ruling against a business owner, instructing her to pay monthly salaries to a nurse who was contracted a year ago to work in a medical center. The defendant failed to pay the nurse’s salaries for several months, and did not commit to the contract agreement.

The nurse then decided to file a case at the court after several failed attempts to resolve the issue directly with the owner.

The court announced the rulings after several hearings as the defendant failed to make an appearance at the court despite the several notification messages.

Labor courts in Saudi Arabia were officially launched last month in order to help organize and support the workforce inside the Kingdom.

“Seeing rulings like this give us appreciation to the role those newly launched courts are going to play” says the ministry. “although we are still at the beginning but we can see great potential in these courts and how they can help the labor market in Saudi Arabia.”

According to latest statistics, there are over 13.8 million employees across the Kingdom working in various industries. Labor courts will be attending to issues and disputes related to this workforce in Saudi Arabia.


Crown prince speaks with regional leaders about Iranian aggression

Updated 28 February 2026
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Crown prince speaks with regional leaders about Iranian aggression

  • Calls came as several Gulf Arab states were targeted by Iranian ​missiles

RIYADH: Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman spoke to several regional leaders on the phone on Saturday, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The calls came as several Gulf Arab states were targeted by Iranian ​missiles after Tehran pledged to retaliate against strikes by the US and Israel that hit several cities in Iran in the early hours of Saturday.

The crown prince spoke with UAE president Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, Bahraini King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa, Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, and King Abdullah II of Jordan.

The crown prince affirmed the Kingdom’s full solidarity with, and support for, their nations and stressed “Saudi Arabia’s readiness to mobilize all its resources to assist them in responding to the brutal Iranian attacks they suffered, which undermine the region’s security and stability,” the SPA added.