Majid Al-Hogail, head of KSA’s newly formed Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing

Majid Al-Hogail
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Updated 29 January 2021
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Majid Al-Hogail, head of KSA’s newly formed Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing

Majid Al-Hogail was named minister of the newly formed Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing following a royal order to combine the Housing Ministry and the Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs. 

Al-Hogail has been housing minister since July 2015, and chairman of the Real Estate General Authority since January 2017. As housing minister, he has led the effort to implement the affordable housing initiative of Vision 2030. He has also been the acting minister of municipal and rural affairs since February 2020.

Al-Hogail received a bachelor’s degree in accounting from King Saud University in 1985.

He also obtained a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1998. 

A year later, he did a US accounting fellowship in New Mexico. He completed an extended development program in management at the International Institute for Management Development in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 2007.

Additionally, he attended a number of training courses, including plans for guaranteeing the foundation’s continuity in emergency cases, financing the agents and activating and integrating the finance administration with the stock market in Saudi Arabia.

He was managing director of the RAFAL Real Estate Development Co. from August 2007, before joining Aljazira Capital in January 2014 as its chairman, leaving both in July 2015.

During the same period, he was a board member of budget airline Flynas. Earlier, he served as deputy finance director at the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) from 1990 to 1998.

Al-Hogail, who is a member of the board of directors at Qiddiya, NEOM, Amaala, the Red Sea Development Co. and ROSHN, has also been chairman of the Real Estate Development Fund since July 2015, and chairman of the Saudi Real Estate Refinance Co. since August 2017. 


KSrelief Masam project clears 1,263 landmines from Yemen in one week

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KSrelief Masam project clears 1,263 landmines from Yemen in one week

  • Total number of mines cleared since the project began in 2018 has now risen to 547,215
  • Mines had been indiscriminately planted across Yemeni lands, claiming the lives of innocent civilians

RIYADH: KSrelief’s Masam project for clearing landmines in Yemen removed 1,263 mines in the first week of March, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The Masam team removed two pieces of unexploded ordnance in Al-Khokha district in Hodeidah governorate; three anti-personnel mines and 875 pieces unexploded ordnance in Mukalla district in Hadramout governorate; and 33 anti-tank mines and 350 pieces of unexploded ordnance in Marib governorate.

The total number of mines cleared since the project began in 2018 has now risen to 547,215.

These mines had been indiscriminately planted across Yemeni lands, claiming the lives of innocent civilians — children, women, and the elderly — and instilling fear among the population.

Through its humanitarian arm, KSrelief, Saudi Arabia continues its efforts to clear Yemeni lands of mines, enhancing civilian safety and contributing to enabling the Yemeni people to live dignified and secure lives.

Masam removed 6,682 mines, unexploded ordnance and improvised explosive devices between Feb. 1 and Feb. 20, the project said.

The total included 5,278 pieces of unexploded ordnance, 1,325 anti-tank mines, 38 anti-personnel mines and 41 improvised explosive devices.

During the third week of February alone, Masam teams cleared 2,484 pieces of unexploded ordnance, 149 anti-tank mines, 17 anti-personnel mines and 26 improvised explosive devices.

The project said that its teams cleared 729,273 sq. meters of land across Yemen up to Feb. 20.

Since operations began in Midi district, Masam teams have removed 8,252 mines, unexploded ordnance and explosive devices, including 2,676 mines and unexploded ordanance cleared during recent operations.