Dr. Waleed Alsalem, CEO of the Saudi health ministry's National Health Laboratory

Dr. Waleed Alsalem
Updated 30 March 2019
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Dr. Waleed Alsalem, CEO of the Saudi health ministry's National Health Laboratory

Dr. Waleed Alsalem has been CEO of the National Health Laboratory at the Saudi Ministry of Health since November 2017 and director of the ministry’s National Center for Tropical Disease since May 2015. 

Before studying abroad, he was a laboratory specialist and manager of the ministry’s vector-borne diseases laboratory between 2007 and 2010.

Alsalem is a specialist in rare tropical diseases and biosecurity. He joined Saudi Arabia’s national vector-borne disease control program and has been working on an assessment of the impact of human movement caused by forced displacement and migration in the Middle East and North Africa. 

Alsalem holds a bachelor’s degree in clinical laboratory sciences from King Saud University in Riyadh, and a master’s degree in molecular biology and a Ph.D. in tropical medicine from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine in the UK.

He worked as a researcher at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine for six months between 2015 and 2016. 

Alsalem has been awarded first place in professional achievement at the Study UK Alumni Awards 2019. Simon Collis, British ambassador to Saudi Arabia, presented the award at the embassy in Riyadh.


Saudi Arabia announces new financial support to the Yemeni government

Updated 16 January 2026
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Saudi Arabia announces new financial support to the Yemeni government

RIYADH: Saudi Ambassador to Yemen and Supervisor of the Saudi Program for the Development and Reconstruction of Yemen Mohammed Al-Jaber announced that the Kingdom, under the directives of its leadership, has provided new support to the Yemeni government's budget, aimed at paying the salaries of state employees in all sectors.

In a post on X, Al-Jaber stated that this support complements a package of development projects and initiatives, amounting to SR1.9 billion, announced on Wednesday. The package includes provision of necessary petroleum derivatives to operate power plants, which will contribute to improving the living standards of people in Yemen and alleviating daily burdens on them.

Al-Jaber’s post emphasized, in particular, that all salaries of military and security forces linked to the the higher military committee linked to the Saudi led Coalition will be paid as of Sunday. 

 

The post is likely relate to Several Media reports which have suggested that disgraced former Southern Transitional Council (STC) chief Aidaroos Al Zubaidi — who has now fled Yemen — was taking advantage of military personnel and withholding salaries as means of pressure. Al-Zubaidi is wanted by the Yemeni government for acts of high treason and corruption. 

The ambassador emphasized that these steps come within the framework of supporting the Yemeni government's efforts to implement the economic reform program, which aims to achieve financial and economic stability and enhance the state's ability to meet its basic obligations.