Needy families in Mauritania and Nigeria benefit from KSrelief surgery projects

1 / 6
KSrelief continues its voluntary medical campaign for open heart surgery and catheterization in Mauritania. (SPA)
2 / 6
KSrelief continues its voluntary medical campaign for open heart surgery and catheterization in Mauritania. (SPA)
3 / 6
KSrelief continues its voluntary medical campaign for open heart surgery and catheterization in Mauritania. (SPA)
4 / 6
KSrelief continues its voluntary medical campaign for open heart surgery and catheterization in Mauritania. (SPA)
5 / 6
KSrelief continues its voluntary medical campaign for open heart surgery and catheterization in Mauritania. (SPA)
6 / 6
KSrelief continues its voluntary medical campaign for open heart surgery and catheterization in Mauritania. (SPA)
Short Url
Updated 11 June 2021
Follow

Needy families in Mauritania and Nigeria benefit from KSrelief surgery projects

  • 20 open-heart surgeries and 39 cardiac catheterization surgeries performed so far in Mauritania
  • 152 surgeries done in Nigeria by Srelief, in cooperation with Al-Basar International Foundation

NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania: The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief), in cooperation with the Muslim World League (MWL), is supporting Mauritania’s medical sector through a voluntary medical campaign offering specialist heart surgery.

Since the beginning of the campaign, the volunteer medical team has successfully performed 20 open-heart surgeries and 39 cardiac catheterization surgeries — a procedure used to diagnose and treat cardiovascular conditions.

The project is one of several humanitarian projects being implemented by the Kingdom in the country.

The project aims to treat patients from low-income families.

In Nigeria, KSrelief, in cooperation with Al-Basar International Foundation, carried out 152 surgeries, examined 1,006 patients, distributed 376 glasses and provided 842 prescriptions as part of a campaign to combat blindness.

The campaign benefits families and individuals of limited income.

 


Fragrance artisans weave heritage into Jazan Festival experience

Updated 02 January 2026
Follow

Fragrance artisans weave heritage into Jazan Festival experience

Riyadh: Perfumes are emerging as living connections to ancestral memory at the Jazan Festival 2026, which opened on Friday, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

A narrative rooted in botanical origins is unfolding as veteran craftswomen showcase decades of accumulated wisdom, transforming the contents of native plants into small vessels that distill the human bond with terrain.

Aromas wafting through the space suggest imagery of regional ecosystems — fragrant vegetation cultivated across highland and lowland zones, harvested during optimal periods, then subjected to extended drying and distillation processes before materializing as perfumes and essences embodying geographical character, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Arranged fragrance containers resemble nature’s output, composed by skilled practitioners versed in harvest timing, plant dormancy requirements and scent extraction methods, yielding products preserving organic integrity and territorial identity.

Craftswoman Fatima bint Mohammed Al-Faifi has dedicated two decades to perfume production, characterizing regional practice as social custom interwoven throughout daily existence — deployed in guest reception, featured at celebrations, accompanying community gathering — elevating scent to cultural signature, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Festival attendees are discovering aromatic botanicals, absorbing production methodology explanations and discerning nuanced olfactory distinctions, demonstrating how craftsmanship blends persistence with expertise, tradition with innovation.

Perfume artisan involvement aligns with Jazan Festival’s initiative repositioning traditional crafts as dynamic, evolving culture while spotlighting women’s contributions safeguarding regional inheritance and expressing this through modern methods, the Saudi Press Agency reported.