Saudia Cargo joins UNICEF freight mission to support vaccine delivery

The initiative means that airlines will prioritize the delivery of lifesaving supplies. (AFP)
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Updated 06 April 2021
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Saudia Cargo joins UNICEF freight mission to support vaccine delivery

  • Saudia Cargo joins Emirates, Brussels Airlines, Lufthansa Cargo, Air France KLM, Martinair Cargo and Cargolux, among others

JEDDAH: Saudia Cargo has joined UNICEF’s Humanitarian Airfreight Initiative to support the delivery of lifesaving coronavirus vaccines around the world.
The company is Saudi Arabia’s airfreight flag carrier. It has joined the initiative together with 10 leading airlines to help deliver vaccines alongside essential medicines, medical devices and other critical supplies.
As part of the initiative, air routes to more than 100 countries will support the COVAX Facility to ensure equitable access to vaccines.
Saudia Cargo joins Emirates, Brussels Airlines, Lufthansa Cargo, Air France KLM, Martinair Cargo and Cargolux, among others.
COVAX Facility’s first round distribution plan will provide doses to 145 countries starting in the first half of this year. Countries will then immunize 3 percent of their population, which will be followed in the second half of the year by the further distribution of 2 billion vaccine doses.
“Saudia Cargo is ready and in full power to operate for the UNICEF Humanitarian Airfreight Initiative and take part in this global vaccine delivery effort through its wide range of destinations and connection points,” said CEO Omar Hariri.

FASTFACTS

• As part of the initiative, air routes to more than 100 countries will support the COVAX Facility to ensure equitable access to vaccines.

• Saudia Cargo joins Emirates, Brussels Airlines, Lufthansa Cargo, Air France KLM, Martinair Cargo and Cargolux, among others.

“We fully understand our role and will work hand in hand with UNICEF and ensure maximum global reach for the vaccines. Safe, timely and efficient transportation of these supplies is paramount, and we are sure our air freighters will get the job done,” he added.
The initiative means that airlines will prioritize the delivery of lifesaving supplies, and requires them to add freight capacity to routes when necessary, and take important measures to maintain temperature control and security.




COVAX Facility’s first round distribution plan will provide doses to 145 countries starting in the first half of this year.
(Social media)

“Delivery of these lifesaving vaccines is a monumental and complex undertaking, considering the sheer volume that needs to be transported, the cold chain requirements, the number of expected deliveries and the diversity of routes,” said Etleva Kadilli, director of UNICEF Supply Division.
“We are grateful to these airlines for joining forces with the UNICEF Humanitarian Airfreight Initiative to support the rollout of vaccines.”
The 10-strong fleet of airfreight companies will also form a global logistics mechanism for potential humanitarian health crises both now and in the future.
So far, COVAX has shipped more than 33 million vaccines to 74 countries.
Belize recently received 33,600 doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines, while Vietnam received 811,200 doses. Bolivia was also given 92,430 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.
COVAX deliveries and subsequent vaccinations to health workers aim to empower their critical roles amid the pandemic.


Rooted in memory: How Rola Daftardar turns Saudi heritage into living art

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Rooted in memory: How Rola Daftardar turns Saudi heritage into living art

  • Ma Maison by Rola curates, produces home accessories
  • Aim to reflect Kingdom as ‘authentic, layered and artistic’

RIYADH: For Rola Daftardar, creativity is not simply about design — it is about memory, emotion and belonging.

Saudi by birth, originally from Madinah and raised in Jeddah, Daftardar carries a layered identity shaped further by her Lebanese mother. That blend of cultures, she says, taught her early on to see beauty in contrast and turn it into strength.

“My identity has always been a mix,” she said during a recent interview. “It taught me how to appreciate detail, emotion and storytelling through objects.”

From childhood, she was drawn to art and pieces with soul — objects that feel lived with rather than merely displayed. She went on to study arts, history and media, developing a philosophy that creativity is not only aesthetic but deeply emotional.

“Design is a way of sharing parts of myself,” she explained. “It’s storytelling through material, color and scent.”

Four years ago, that philosophy became Ma Maison by Rola — a brand that began as a personal creative outlet and gradually grew, season by season, into a carefully curated world of home accessories and tablescaping pieces.

Each year, she approaches her collections as chapters. “Every season has its own breath,” she said. “Every year carries a new intention.”

Her work comes most alive during Ramadan and national occasions, when gatherings take center stage and homes become spaces of shared ritual. Between winter and summer, ideas quietly bloom. But this year’s message feels especially personal.

Daftardar’s latest collection is deeply rooted in Saudi heritage, inspired by cities including Jeddah, Riyadh, AlUla and Taif — places she sees as emotional landscapes as much as geographic ones.

“With Saudi Arabia opening to the world, I felt a responsibility to present my country as I see it — authentic, layered and artistic,” she said.

Candles became the starting point of that story. More than fragrance, they are tributes to memory. Musk reflects the warmth of Jeddah, rose captures the calm elegance of Taif, and oud represents the depth and strength of Riyadh.

Hand-painted details and carefully chosen colors complete the sensory narrative.

The idea for her foldable side tables emerged during a walk along Jeddah’s corniche. Watching families gather spontaneously by the sea reminded her of the informal spaces that connect people — a feeling she also associates with historic Al-Balad.

“I wanted to create something simple and functional that carries that spirit of gathering,” she said.

The concept expanded to Diriyah — old and new — and to AlUla, where history and futurism coexist.

Yet it is tablescaping that remains closest to her heart. “I never choose pieces randomly,” she said. “I imagine the people around the table, the dishes being served, the conversations happening.”

For Daftardar, every bowl, riser and glass element forms part of a complete narrative. Every table tells a story.

Her ultimate aim is clear: to reflect Saudi Arabia as she feels it — warm, generous and deeply rooted. A place where modernity meets origin, and tradition evolves without losing its soul.

That is where Ma Maison by Rola lives — in the space between memory and modernity — and it is a story she is proud to tell.