Yasser Al-Qahtani, Saudi Olympian and national football team player

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Updated 05 October 2023
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Yasser Al-Qahtani, Saudi Olympian and national football team player

Yasser Al-Qahtani’s career as a footballer started in 2000 when he played for Al-Qadisiyah before moving to Al-Hilal in 2005. He joined the UAE’s Al-Ain in 2011, before returning to Al-Hilal in 2012, where he stayed until he retired in April 2018.

He played for Saudi Arabia in the Olympics and then joined the Saudi Arabian national football team in 2002. He retired from the national team in 2013.

Al-Qahtani won several championships with Al-Hilal, including the Saudi Professional League in 2008, 2010, 2011, 2017 and 2018, the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Cup in 2006, the Saudi Crown Prince Cup in 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013 and 2016, the Saudi Super Cup in 2015 and 2018, the King’s Cup in 2015 and 2017, and the Dubai International Cup in 2011.

With Al-Qadisiyah he won the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Cup in 2002 and 2005 and the Saudi Arabia Division 1 shield in 2002.

He won the UAE Arabian Gulf League with Al-Ain in 2012.

As a member of the Saudi Arabia national football team Al-Qahtani also won the Arabian Gulf Cup in 2004, the Arab Nations Cup in 2002 and the 1st Islamic Solidarity Games in 2005.

Tickets for Al-Qahtani’s benefit match on Dec. 1 to mark his retirement were released on Nov. 20. The match will be between Al-Hilal and the star-studded Y20 team, which includes professional footballers from around the world.

The chairman of the General Authority for Entertainment, Turki Alalshikh, announced on his Twitter account that the game is part of the Riyadh Season that runs until the end of January 2020.


Saudi reserve records critically endangered Ruppel’s vulture

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Saudi reserve records critically endangered Ruppel’s vulture

RIYADH: King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority has announced the sighting and documentation of a Ruppel’s vulture (Gyps rueppellii) within the boundaries of the reserve — a landmark environmental and historical event.

This is the third officially documented record of the species at national level and the first of its kind in the central and eastern regions of the Kingdom, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The sighting carries global significance given the conservation status of the vulture, which is classified as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, following the loss of more than 90 percent of its population throughout its original range in Africa over the past three decades.

The appearance of this rare bird in King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve adds a new entry to the limited record of its sightings in the Kingdom, which began in Aseer region in 1985, followed by a sighting in 2018, and another in AlUla in September 2025. 

Its latest recording in central and eastern Saudi Arabia is considered an important environmental indicator of the quality of natural habitats provided by the reserve.

Globally, Ruppel’s vulture faces major threats, including poisoning from pesticides, electrocution, collisions with power lines, and the loss of nesting sites as a result of urban expansion and land-use change. 

Additional challenges include the decline of carrion resulting from changes in livestock-rearing practices, illegal hunting for use in traditional beliefs, and the adverse effects of climate change on its breeding areas and migratory routes.

The vulture is primarily found in the African Sahel and is considered extremely rare in the Arabian Peninsula. Its sighting in King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve underscores the Kingdom’s leading role in conserving biodiversity and supporting the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 for protecting ecosystems.

It also reflects the success of the authority’s efforts to protect wildlife and restore ecosystems, positioning the reserve as a safe and attractive habitat for rare and native species.