Munir Eldesouki, assistant minister at the Saudi Ministry of Communications and Information Technology 

Munir Eldesouki
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Updated 01 March 2020
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Munir Eldesouki, assistant minister at the Saudi Ministry of Communications and Information Technology 

Munir Eldesouki is the assistant minister at the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology (MCIT). He was appointed by royal decree on Feb. 25.

Before his appointment, Eldesouki served as deputy minister for development and planning at the MCIT. He was in charge of strategic planning, making policies and providing studies for his ministry for about two years. While in that post, he also co-chaired the Digital Economy Task Force under the Saudi G20 presidency.

From March 2018 to April 2018, Eldesouki worked as a senior adviser to the minister of MCIT. He acted as chief of staff and adviser to the minister in charge of building an executive advisory team, as well as delivering on special projects related to requests from the government on innovation and governance.

Eldesouki holds more than 25 patents and has won many awards. He has contributed to many national initiatives as part of Vision 2030.

Eldesouki gained his B.Sc. in electrical engineering from the King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in 2002. He also received an M.A.Sc in electrical and computer engineering from McMaster University Ontario, Canada in 2005.

He attained his M.Eng. degree in engineering entrepreneurship and innovation from McMaster University in 2007.

He obtained his Ph.D. from the same university in electrical and computer engineering in 2010, specializing in CMOS imagers for low-level light biomedical applications in addition to CMOS imagers for high-speed noninvasive fluorescence lifetime imaging systems.

 

 


Saudi Arabia stops ballistic missiles aimed at Prince Sultan Air Base

Updated 11 March 2026
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Saudi Arabia stops ballistic missiles aimed at Prince Sultan Air Base

  • Saudi Arabia’s cabinet on Tuesday strongly condemned Iranian attacks targeting the Kingdom

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia shot down seven ballistic missiles, the defense ministry said early Wednesday.
Six of the missiles were aimed at Prince Sultan Air Base, and the other was intercepted while heading to the Eastern Province.
Seven drones were knocked down heading to the Shaybah oil field in the Empty Quarter.
Thirteen drones were also shot down in Al-Kharj, Hafar Al-Batin, and other parts of the Eastern Province, the ministry said.
The war, launched by the US and Israel on Iran, has escalated, impacting regional stability and sparking a global energy crisis.
Saudi Arabia’s cabinet on Tuesday strongly condemned Iranian attacks targeting the Kingdom, Gulf states and other countries in the region, saying they threaten regional security and violate international law.
The cabinet session, chaired by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman via videoconference, reaffirmed Saudi Arabia’s right to take all necessary measures to protect its security, sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Brent crude hit a historic $120 a barrel on Monday before settling back down to $90 a barrel on Tuesday.
Amin Nasser, CEO of Aramco, the world’s top oil exporter, told reporters: “There would be catastrophic consequences for the world’s oil markets and the longer the disruption goes on ... the more drastic the ‌consequences for the ‌global economy.” 
The White House said that gas prices will plummet once US objectives in the war are reached.
The conflict could stretch on for months despite US President Donald Trump saying that it could be drawing to a close. But Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has said it will end when they decide.