Saudi Arabia’s Misk Foundation launches program to grow youth nonprofits

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Updated 09 August 2021
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Saudi Arabia’s Misk Foundation launches program to grow youth nonprofits

  • The program will support nonprofit organizations through two tracks

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Misk Foundation launched last month a program to empower youth nonprofit organizations and encourage Saudi youth to play an active role in community service.

The three-month program aims to build the basic capabilities of youth organizations by teaching world-class strategies.

It will cover multiple parts of an organization’s journey, including strategic clarity, financial sustainability, communication and impact measurement.

Attendance will be in person over 13 weeks, starting Friday, through a training camp that includes a set of workshops and courses.

The program will support nonprofit organizations through two tracks. The first track embraces initiatives and new ideas to establish nonprofit organizations that serve youth. This will involve full support from the beginning of a concept to its institutional launch and the start of its independent work.

The second track concentrates on expanding the scope of existing organizations that face difficulties in expanding their missions.

Dima Al-Sheikh, director of community engagement, global affairs and research at Misk, said that the foundation is taking a different strategic path and opening new horizons in its work journey by dedicating part of its program to supporting community youth organizations.

“This will contribute to the discovery of distinctive ideas and organizations that aim at serving youth, and provide them with the best experiences to help them serve the community, thus contributing to achieving national leadership in innovative programs directed at Saudi youth,” she said.

Al-Sheikh added that the third sector in the Kingdom is in a “promising” position, and that its institutions are multiplying year after year because of the comprehensive government support system to maximize their economic and social impact.


Saudi deputy FM attends OIC ministers’ meeting on Somalia situation

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Saudi deputy FM attends OIC ministers’ meeting on Somalia situation

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Waleed Elkhereiji has reaffirmed the Kingdom’s full support for Somalia’s sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity, while strongly rejecting any actions that undermine the country’s stability.

Speaking at an extraordinary meeting of foreign ministers from member states of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Elkhereiji condemned the declaration of mutual recognition between Israeli occupation authorities and the Somaliland region, describing it as a unilateral separatist move that violated international law, the UN Charter and the OIC Charter.

He stressed the Kingdom’s categorical rejection of any attempts to impose parallel entities that contradict Somalia’s unity and territorial integrity, or that seek to divide or diminish its sovereignty. Elkhereiji also reiterated Saudi Arabia’s support for Somalia’s legitimate state institutions and its commitment to preserving the country’s stability and the security of its people.

Elkhereiji called on the OIC and its member states to adopt a firm and unified Islamic position rejecting any recognition of, or engagement with, separatist entities in Somalia. He urged coordinated action in international forums to affirm Somalia’s unity and prevent what he described as dangerous precedents that could threaten the sovereignty of OIC member states.

He further called for holding the Israeli entity fully responsible for any political or security consequences resulting from such actions, and for rejecting any cooperation arising from the declaration of mutual recognition.

During the meeting, he also reiterated the Kingdom’s position on the Palestinian cause, emphasizing its centrality and Saudi Arabia’s support for efforts to secure a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. He said this would enable the Palestinian people to exercise their right to self-determination and establish an independent state along the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.