Saudi Arabia to suspend domestic flights, mass land transport from Saturday

Travel on public transport within Saudi Arabia has been suspended. (AFP)
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Updated 20 March 2020
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Saudi Arabia to suspend domestic flights, mass land transport from Saturday

  • Taxi services warned against evading the ban

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia is suspending domestic flights, trains, buses and taxis for 14 days in a heightened effort to stop the spread of the COVID-19, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said on Friday.

Quoting a directive from the Ministry of Interior, SPA said the new measure will take effect at 6 a.m. on Saturday, March 21, 2020.

Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Health has confirmed 274 COVID-19 cases so far and no deaths, while globally the pandemic has killed nearly 10,000 and infected over 240,000.

Only flights related to humanitarian and necessary cases, medical evacuation aircraft and private aviation would be allowed, provided that they are covered by the necessary permits issued by the Civil Aviation Authority, SPA said.

Also exempted from the travel ban are buses belonging to government agencies or public or private health facilities, and commercial establishments transporting their employees, or those that are used for health, humanitarian or security purposes.

Bus and taxi operators are obliged to obey the suspension order so as not to suffer penalties, the SPA quoted the Interior Ministry.

Affected in the train services suspension are the Riyadh-Dammam line through Abqaiq and Hofuf, the Riyadh-Jawf line through the Majmaa, Al-Qassim and Hail, and the Haramain Express. 

Allowed to continue operating are commercial transport trains, including the freight train between King Abdulaziz Port in Dammam and the Dry Port in Riyadh, and the mining train of the Saudi Railways Company "Saar".

Transport ferries between Jazan and Farasan Island may also continue operating, but the number of passengers would be reduced to 100 people per trip, "taking into account the employees and residents of Farsan Island, and not allowing travel through them for tourist purposes."

Cargo ships will be allowed to continue with their usual program, provided that the crews take all precautions to limit the transmission of infection.

Transportation related to vital sectors such as health, services and basic commodities such as food, energy, water and communications, etc., air freight and necessary security transfers will not be affected by the temporary ban, said the SPA report.


Arab identity, heritage in focus at Riyadh’s Arab Narrative Days event

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Arab identity, heritage in focus at Riyadh’s Arab Narrative Days event

  • Event highlights evolution of Arabic language, culture and civilization
  • ALECSO partnership strengthens knowledge programs aimed at preserving heritage

RIYADH: Prince Turki Al-Faisal, chairman of the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies, inaugurated the third Al-Marwiyah Al-Arabiyah, or Arab Narrative Days, event in Riyadh on Sunday.

The two-day event, with the theme “From Orientalist Narrative to Arab Narrative,” aims to reconstruct the Arab narrative within a critical framework and reclaim the strengths of Arab and Islamic culture.

It also highlights the aspects that have shaped Arab civilization, culture and identity, while shedding light on history and society.

Prince Turki said in his opening remarks that the Arab aesthetic was born from “the silence of the desert and the clarity of its horizon,” where beauty first emerged as sound, script and orientation converged to shape early Arab consciousness.

The chairman addressed the foundational moment when the Arabic language rose to prominence with the revelation. He added that this transformation began with the descent of the Holy Qur’an, when the Arabs were captivated by its eloquence, and with the growing importance of writing, as “Arabic calligraphy became the vessel of the Divine Word, giving rise to the journey of Arab Islamic art.”

He highlighted that the center has upheld this vision since its inception, transforming its treasures and collections into an “Arabic narrative” visible through art and knowledge, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Prince Turki said that cooperation with the Arab League Educational, Cultural and Scientific Organization reflects this approach and establishes a knowledge partnership that restores attention to the Arabic narrative through the “Arab Narrative” programs.

Mohamed Ould Amar, director-general of ALECSO, commended the center’s role as a beacon of scientific research in the Arab world.

He added that organizing the Arab Narrative Days aligns with the organization’s vision of preserving Arab heritage and reinforcing its presence in modern consciousness.

Amar said that the project is a pivotal step in rebuilding the Arab narrative on critical foundations, restoring the cultural presence of Arabs throughout their scientific and intellectual history, and linking creativity, language, identity and the paths of modernization.

The third edition extends the first edition of Arab Narrative Days, held in February 2023, which focused on critiquing classical narration and tracing the journey of science to and from the Arabs, highlighting that restoring the civilizational role begins with the nation’s awareness of its history and identity.

It also builds on the second edition, held in May 2024, which reinterpreted the culture of the desert as the primary memory where language, imagination and values were formed, drawing on the legacy of Bedouin studies and the efforts of pioneers in documenting desert life and its cultural layers.