300 volunteers to man 25 ambulatory points in Makkah to serve Hajj pilgrims

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Teams specially trained to deal with prevention and control issues related to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. (Supplied)
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Teams specially trained to deal with prevention and control issues related to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. (Supplied)
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Teams specially trained to deal with prevention and control issues related to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. (Supplied)
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Updated 16 July 2021
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300 volunteers to man 25 ambulatory points in Makkah to serve Hajj pilgrims

  • More than 2,000 medical items have been made available to the volunteer teams including an electronic paramedic app to alert them to emergency case

JEDDAH: More than 300 volunteers from the Saudi Red Crescent Authority (SRCA) will help provide ambulatory services in Makkah, Mina, Arafat, and Muzdalifah during this year’s Hajj season.

Teams specially trained to deal with prevention and control issues related to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic will assist in raising awareness about health and safety precautionary measures put in place to prevent the spread of the virus among pilgrims and visitors to the Grand Mosque in Makkah and other holy sites.

More than 2,000 medical items have been made available to the volunteer teams including an electronic paramedic app to alert them to emergency case reports sent by the SRCA operations center.

The authority’s general director of volunteering, Hanaa Al-Shamrani, said 25 ambulatory posts each manned by between three and five individuals had been set up inside the Grand Mosque and at nearby holy sites.

The stations would operate from Thursday with more than 80 volunteers supporting pilgrim movements in Mina, Arafat, and Muzdalifah.

Al-Shamrani noted that 60 percent of the volunteers were doctors, with the remainder including nursing and emergency medical workers, pharmacists, physiotherapists, and respiratory therapists.

 


Saudi Arabia champions AI and sustainable growth at UN tourism meeting in Kuwait

Updated 12 February 2026
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Saudi Arabia champions AI and sustainable growth at UN tourism meeting in Kuwait

  • Saudi Tourism Minister says tourism today accounts for approximately 10 percent of the world economy, contributing about $10 trillion to global GDP 

KUWAIT CITY: Saudi Arabia’s Tourism Minister Ahmed Al-Khateeb has called for stronger international cooperation to build a tourism ecosystem that is integrated, resilient, and future-ready, the Saudi Press Agency reported Thursday.

In a opening address at the 52nd UN Tourism Regional Commission for the Middle East in Kuwait City, he noted that tourism is “no longer a peripheral activity but a massive engine of economic development.”

“With an estimated contribution exceeding $10 trillion to global GDP, tourism today accounts for approximately 10 percent of the world economy,” said Al-Khateeb, speaking as president of the 26th UN Tourism General Assembly. The three-day conference opened on Feb. 10.

He pointed to the Middle East’s exceptional recovery, which recorded a 39 percent increase in international arrivals in 2025 compared to 2019, welcoming nearly 100 million visitors last year.

The minister highlighted Saudi Arabia’s driving force behind these regional statistics, noting that the Kingdom now represents approximately 30% of the Middle East tourism market in both visitor numbers and spending.

“We are proud that Saudi tourism’s uninterrupted growth has become a driving force for regional tourism, and we look forward to continuing our close cooperation with UN Tourism to share our expertise with the world,” he said.

Focus on AI

Addressing the meeting’s central theme of Artificial Intelligence (AI), Al-Khateeb emphasized the need for responsible innovation. He described AI as a key enabler for growth but stressed that the “human touch” defining the hospitality sector must be maintained and the workforce protected.

On the sidelines of the regional commission, the minister met with counterparts from across the region to explore ways to promote regional cooperation and alignment to enhance resilience and build tourism industries that can drive inclusive economic and social development.

Al-Khateeb also met with leading investors from Kuwait to discuss investments in the Kingdom’s tourism sector and explore new opportunities to leverage Saudi Arabia’s integrated investment ecosystem, designed to enable regional and international investors to achieve sustainable, long-term value.

The 52nd UN Tourism Regional Commission for the Middle East is the first held in the region since the 26th UN Tourism General Assembly, hosted in Riyadh last November. 

That assembly resulted in the historic “Riyadh Declaration on the Future of Tourism,” which established a global consensus on sustainability, inclusive growth, and the responsible adoption of human-centric AI for the next fifty years.