Saudi Arabia wins bronze at Asia-Pacific informatics Olympiad

Faris Ibrahim Bassiouni from the general education department of Yanbu competed against 845 students from 35 countries to bring home a bronze medal. (MAWHIBA)
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Updated 26 May 2021
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Saudi Arabia wins bronze at Asia-Pacific informatics Olympiad

RIYADH: Twelve female and male students from the King Abdulaziz and his Companions Foundation for Giftedness and Creativity (MAWHIBA) program represented Saudi Arabia in the 2021 Asia-Pacific Informatics Olympiad hosted by Indonesia. 

Faris Ibrahim Bassiouni from the general education department of Yanbu competed against 845 students from 35 countries to bring home a bronze medal, the Kingdom’s first ever Asia-Pacific Informatics Olympiad medal. 

The Asia-Pacific Informatics Olympiad is a competition to test students' knowledge in interpretation and speed when solving programming tasks.

The Saudi competitors were chosen after excelling in a set of tests and training that extended over 4,000 hours in the MAWHIBA International Olympiad Program in informatics. 

The Kingdom previously won bronze medal in the International Olympiad in Informatics in 2019.


Saudi mine-clearance project in Yemen destroys 4,235 explosive devices in a day

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Saudi mine-clearance project in Yemen destroys 4,235 explosive devices in a day

  • Project Masam aims to rid Yemen of all mines to help ensure the highest standards of safety and security for the Yemeni people

LONDON: Saudi Arabia’s Project Masam cleared 4,235 mines, unexploded ordnance and other explosive devices in a single day from Bab Al-Mandab region in southwestern Yemen, as part of its mission to protect civilians.

Osama Al-Gosaibi, the project’s director general, said it aims to rid Yemen of all mines to help ensure the highest standards of safety and security for the Yemeni people.

On Wednesday, the project’s teams destroyed 33 anti-tank mines, 31 anti-personnel mines, 86 miscellaneous shells, 2,750 assorted rounds, 1,291 breakers and valves used in devices, 12 grenades, two Katyusha rockets, a missile, 15 shell arrows, and 14 other explosive devices.

Masam’s teams are tasked with clearing villages, roads and areas around schools to facilitate the safe movement of civilians and delivery of humanitarian aid.

The project trains local people to become demining engineers, provides them with modern equipment to do the job, and also offers support to Yemenis injured by explosive devices.