Saudi Arabia moves to reassure public over new mutant coronavirus strain

Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Health Tawfiq Al-Rabiah said the Kingdom is still assessing and studying the speed of which the virus is spread. (File/SPA)
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Updated 22 December 2020
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Saudi Arabia moves to reassure public over new mutant coronavirus strain

  • No cases in Kingdom, health minister says
  • Minister says vaccines will often not be affected by variant

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia moved on Monday to reassure the public over the new mutant strain of coronavirus as the world closed its doors to travel from the UK, where the strain was first identified.

The Kingdom has shut its land and sea borders and suspended commercial flights for at least  a week. “We’re closely monitoring and studying the new COVID-19 variant and the leadership has taken all precautionary measures to … assess the situation and understand more about this new variant,” Health Minister Dr. Tawfiq Al-Rabiah said.

There was no evidence to suggest that the new strain was more dangerous or would neutralize the effectiveness of vaccines, the minister said.

Ministry spokesman Dr. Mohammed Al-Abd Al-Aly rejected suggestions that a case of the COVID-19 variant had been reported in the Kingdom. There were no such cases, he said, and studies were still being conducted on the genetic sequencing of the virus.

The Saudi cultural mission in the US urged Saudi students there who had flights home to remain in their residences until the flight suspension was lifted, while maintaining precautionary health measures recommended by their local authorities.

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Saudi citizens who were due to fly home from London on Sunday night were removed from their flights and given free hotel accommodation in the British capital. Many thanked Saudi embassy staff for their swift action.

At home, residents said the new travel restrictions were not unexpected. Saif Miswadeh, 28, a computer programmer from Jordan, had to scrap plans to travel home to visit his family for the new year. “I understand this precautionary measure is for the safety of our loved ones,” he said.

Jordan was one of many countries that closed their borders to Britain on Monday over fears over the new coronavirus strain, which is 70 percent more infectious than the original. India, Pakistan, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, Sweden, Russia and Hong Kong suspended travel for Britons, while Kuwait and Oman closed their borders completely.
Several other nations blocked travel from Britain over the weekend, including France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Austria, Ireland, Belgium and Canada.

Cases of the new strain have also been in detected in Denmark, Italy and the Netherlands.
Australia said two people who travelled from the UK to New South Wales had the mutated virus. Dozens of domestic flights were cancelled and New South Wales locked down more than 250,000 people. “2020 is not done with us yet,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said.

The Kingdom vs. COVID-19
How Saudi Arabia acted swiftly and coordinated a global response to fight the coronavirus, preventing a far worse crisis at home and around the world

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Wrapping up Year of Handicrafts at AlUla’s Winter at Tantora

Updated 9 sec ago
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Wrapping up Year of Handicrafts at AlUla’s Winter at Tantora

  • Annual festival takes place until Jan. 10

ALULA: AlUla’s Old Town has sprung into life with Winter at Tantora — the annual festival which runs until Jan. 10 — as cooler temperatures settle over the region.

The three-week event contains workshops, concerts and gastronomic experiences which have transformed the historic landscape into a vibrant cultural gathering point, catering to locals and visitors alike.

Winter at Tantora takes its name from the traditional sundial, or the tantora, once used to mark the agricultural calendar.

The actual tantora is still perched atop what is now Dar Tantora The House Hotel, which was named as one of Time magazine’s “World’s Greatest Places” in 2024.

One of the festival’s most atmospheric offerings is Shorfat Tantora, where live music fills Al-Jadidah Arts District as musicians perform from balconies, blending traditional rhythms with contemporary beats.

The open-air experience invites audiences to gather and witness music’s unifying power on Thursday and Friday nights between 8:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. It ends on Jan. 2.

Since this year’s festival also highlights Saudi Arabia’s rich artisanal heritage — in line with the Ministry of Culture’s designation of 2025 as the Year of Handicrafts — there are plenty of crafts to be seen.

The festival spirit was also reflected this week at the outdoor Thanaya venue, a short drive from Old Town, where Emirati superstar Ahlam Al-Shamsi, who is known as Ahlam, took to the stage.

Her name, which means “dream” in Arabic, felt particularly fitting as the audience was immersed in her craft on the crisp, cool night with AlUla’s ancient rock formations as a backdrop. With wind billowing over the sky, she was perhaps the brightest star of the night.

Ahlam told the crowd: “In the Year of Handicrafts we celebrate human creativity through the hands that craft and the spirit that creates.

“The weather has been chilly over the last two days, but you (the audience) radiate warmth.”

With craft stations and food trucks nearby, Ahlam represented a modern twist weaved into the ongoing oral storytelling tradition.

Back in Old Town, people enjoyed the Art Walk tour and snaked through the labyrinth of painted mudbrick homes, murals and traditions while being guided by a local storyteller.

The Old Town Culinary Voyage merges storytelling and tasting. It spotlights traditional flavors and culture through aromas, spices and tastings.

Walking through the dusty, uneven rocky ground, visitors come across the ancient “Incense Road,” a well-known trade route central to pre-Islamic history and a main stage for global exchange.

A key stop in a network of ancient caravan routes, the road connected southern parts of Arabia, where frankincense and myrrh were produced, to the Mediterranean world.

These routes made incense one of the most valuable commodities of the ancient world. Parts of the route are now UNESCO World Heritage Sites.