Mansour bin Abdullah Al-Osaimi, system expert at the Bureau of Experts at Saudi Arabia’s Council of Ministers

Mansour bin Abdullah Al-Osaimi
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Updated 08 December 2020
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Mansour bin Abdullah Al-Osaimi, system expert at the Bureau of Experts at Saudi Arabia’s Council of Ministers

Mansour bin Abdullah Al-Osaimi was recently promoted as system expert (B) at the Bureau of Experts at rank 14 at Saudi Arabia’s Council of Ministers.
Al-Osaimi received a bachelor’s degree in Islamic studies with the fundamentals of Islamic jurisprudence as a major at the King Saud University in 2000.
In 2002, he obtained a two-year high diploma in law from the Institute of Public Administration.
Al-Osaimi received a master’s degree in international commercial law at the University of Hull, UK in 2014.
He was an adviser to the former chairman of the Bureau of Experts at the Council of Ministers, Essam bin Saeed. He is also a member and adviser at the Bureau of Experts and Consultants.
Al-Osaimi also worked at the general directorate of advisers at the Shoura Council.
He served as an adviser to a member of the Council of Ministers for Shoura Council affairs.
Al-Osaimi has authored several research papers. In his papers, he comparatively analyzed different aspects of Saudi law and English law.
He has attended several training courses within the Kingdom and abroad.
Al-Osaimi has participated in legal committees and workshops organized by the Arab League. He has served in various specialized committees inside and outside the Kingdom involved in discussing jurisprudence issues.
As an adviser at the Bureau of Experts, he participates in preparing and studying regulations, agreements, international treaties, general plans of the state, and concessions. He also takes part in studying annual reports of ministries and government agencies, expressing his opinion about them, interpreting regulations, and preparing royal decrees and decisions of the Council of Ministers.
He also takes part in studying all issues the Bureau of Experts receives from the leadership or the Council of Ministers’ general committee. 


Board of Grievances unveils judicial intelligence hackathon to foster innovation

Updated 28 December 2025
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Board of Grievances unveils judicial intelligence hackathon to foster innovation

  • Registration opens on Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025, and continues through Jan. 20, 2026

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Board of Grievances has opened registration for the Judicial Intelligence Hackathon, the institution’s first competition seeking sustainable solutions that harness cutting-edge technology to improve the efficiency of judicial procedures, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Registration opens on Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025, and continues through Jan. 20, 2026, as part of efforts to cultivate talent and promote innovation in digital transformation and artificial intelligence in the judicial sector.

The board is calling on industry experts, experienced professionals, and university students to form teams of three to five members. Each team must be led by a Saudi citizen or academic staff member at least 18 years old.

Participants register via a dedicated portal on the board’s digital platform and must submit a preliminary proposal demonstrating practical and legal viability, incorporating advanced technology with appropriate quality standards, and showing innovation relevant to the board's operations with transformative impact and long-term sustainability.

Competition unfolds in two distinct tracks. The first addresses AI applications and creative solutions for administrative justice, tackling challenges such as minimizing procedural errors and offenses during virtual court proceedings and streamlining lawsuit filing classifications.

The second track emphasizes digital innovation enhancing user journeys, focusing on simplifying document submission processes when initiating lawsuits and developing accessibility solutions enabling seniors and people with disabilities to navigate board services more effectively.

Finalists are scheduled to be announced on Jan. 23, 2026, followed by virtual project discussion and presentation sessions on Jan. 28. 

According to the SPA, this methodology for sourcing innovative concepts underscores the dedication of the board’s leadership to advance performance across judicial chambers and administrative divisions while pursuing strategic goals of refining administrative court litigation processes, expediting case resolutions, and establishing competitive leadership in the judicial arena.