Saudi startup competition encourages innovation among youth

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Ahmed (L) and Mohammed Jaleesa. (Photo/Supplied)
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Osama al-Matrafi
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Updated 14 November 2020
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Saudi startup competition encourages innovation among youth

  • Mohammed Domais, whose Jaleesa app — which helps parents find qualified babysitters — won the Social Enterprises track last year, told Arab News that the win had saved his business

JEDDAH: The fifth edition of the MITEF Saudi Startup Competition opened for registration on Friday, under the slogan “Innovate, Inspire, Connect.” Registration will be open until Dec. 10.
With the COVID-19 pandemic ongoing, this year’s competition will be held virtually. It will also include the second Startup Investment Forum (SIF), which is expected to include innovative startups from around the world, as well as the launch of the Saudi Alumni Network Council — a group of competition alumni, Bayan Al-Ghamdi, the head of entrepreneurship programs & MITEF Saudi at Community Jameel, told Arab News.
The startup competition has three tracks: Startups, Social Enterprises, and Ideas. The competition offers a cash prize of SR325,000, in addition to mentorship at the MITEF Saudi Accelerator, a six-week program in collaboration with the MIT Entrepreneurship Center.
The nine winning teams from the MITEF Saudi Startup Competition will also be invited to participate in the MIT Enterprise Forum Arab Startup Competition.
The winner of last year’s Startups track competition, Ahmed Bukhamseen, told Arab News how his Fruits360 software — which integrates point-of-sale systems to provide real-time analysis — has benefited from MITEF’s prizes.
“The monetary award helped us in hiring some of our needed resources as well as raise our marketing exposure,” Bukhamseen said.
“That’s besides the intangible values gained from the workshops and bootcamps and how that helped us fine-tune many aspects in the product, as well as the network gained from the StartSmart Conference and Exhibition.”

The monetary award helped us in hiring some of our needed resources as well as raise our marketing exposure. That’s besides the intangible values gained from the workshops and bootcamps and how that helped us fine-tune many aspects in the product, as well as the network gained from the StartSmart Conference and Exhibition.

Ahmed Bukhamseen, winner of last year’s Startups track competition

Mohammed Domais, whose Jaleesa app — which helps parents find qualified babysitters — won the Social Enterprises track last year, told Arab News that the win had saved his business: “If we hadn’t won the SR100,000 from the competition, we probably would have shut down the company. Now we have 10,000 users and 3,000 babysitters and over 6,000 parents have subscribed to our platform. We achieved big numbers thanks to the competition.”
Even some of those who did not win last year say they benefited greatly from the entrepreneurial competition. Osama Al-Matrafi was one of last year’s finalists in the Social Enterprises track for Waste Turn — an app that offers rewards for safely disposing of electronic waste — and told Arab News that MITEF had given him invaluable information about creating a sustainable business.
“There are some efforts you waste in searching for investors rather than focusing on implementing your business. I identified the real needs of my customers and improved my business model and learned what investors are looking for and how to pitch the idea in front of them,” Al-Matrafi said.


Orphans’ Day: OIC calls for renewed efforts amid escalating crises

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Orphans’ Day: OIC calls for renewed efforts amid escalating crises

  • Day cannot be commemorated without highlighting suffering of orphans in Gaza, says secretary-general
  • Hissein Brahim Taha: Caring for orphans is a collective responsibility and a religious, humanitarian and ethical duty that requires concerted efforts

RIYADH: In commemoration of Orphan Day in the Islamic World, which falls on the 15th day of Ramadan each year, the General Secretariat of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation called on the international community, member states and humanitarian institutions to intensify efforts aimed at promoting the care of orphans.

The annual commemoration serves to implement the decision of the Council of Foreign Ministers issued at its 40th session (Conakry 2013), which aims to institutionalize concern for orphan issues and place their requirements at the top of the OIC’s humanitarian agenda, said an official statement.

OIC Secretary-General Hissein Brahim Taha said: “Caring for orphans is a collective responsibility and a religious, humanitarian and ethical duty that requires concerted efforts to ensure that they enjoy their full rights and provide a safe and supportive environment that enables them to build their future and participate actively in the development of their communities.”

The secretary-general added that the event comes amid increasing humanitarian challenges, which call for more comprehensive and sustainable approaches to ensure the protection and care of orphans, especially in light of natural disasters and conflicts in OIC member states and the resulting increase in the number of orphans and their many needs.

He said that the day could not be commemorated without highlighting the suffering of orphans in the Gaza Strip, where there are 57,000, including 17,000 children who were orphaned as a result of the recent brutal Israeli war, 3,000 of whom lost both parents.

This makes the Gaza Strip in dire need of a large number of care homes to provide a decent life for orphans, he said, adding that orphans in Gaza were the biggest victims of the Israeli aggression due to the lack of education and the destruction of many schools and educational and social facilities that used to support them.

The secretary-general highlighted the importance of developing institutional and family care programs, supporting education and psychological and social rehabilitation for orphans, and strengthening partnerships with charitable and humanitarian institutions to provide integrated health and living services that ensure their positive integration into their communities.

He said that caring for orphans and protecting their rights is a fundamental value in Islam, which calls for their care and urges the provision of comprehensive protection for them educationally, health-wise, socially, and in terms of living conditions to ensure their proper upbringing, preserve their human dignity and support their future.