Saudi Arabia launches iftar program in Sudan, Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Indonesia

KSA launches iftar program in Sudan, Bangladesh, Ethiopia. (SPA)
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Updated 14 April 2022
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Saudi Arabia launches iftar program in Sudan, Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Indonesia

  • Several tons of dates and food distributed to thousands of people

KHARTOUM: Saudi Arabia launched the King Salman program for iftar on Friday in Sudan and South Sudan with the distribution of dates and food.

The event was coordinated by the Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Dawah, and Guidance — represented by the religious attaché of the Kingdom’s embassy in Khartoum.

Several officials were present including Sudan’s Minister of Religious Affairs and Endowments Abdul Ati Ahmed Abbas, and Ambassador of Saudi Arabia to Sudan Ali bin Hassan Jaafar.

More than 15,000 food baskets and 10 tons of dates will be distributed during the holy month throughout the Sudanese states.

The Sudanese minister praised the Kingdom for its aid programs that he said has benefitted many people across the globe.

In Bangladesh, the ministry also distributed food baskets for more than 129,000 people, as well as 15 tons of dates for over 45,000 people.

In attendance at the inauguration ceremony was Saudi Ambassador to Bangladesh Issa bin Yusuf Al-Dahilan, and the religious attaché at the embassy, Ali Al-Zgheibi.

“Each basket contains 20 kilograms of various food items,” said the envoy.

The Saudi ministry also distributed 800 Ramadan food baskets and 11 tons of dates for 8,000 beneficiaries in Ethiopia.

Ethiopian officials thanked the Saudi government for this support.

Meanwhile, the Kingdom delivered 2,500 Ramadan baskets, 15 tons of luxury dates, and 200,000 copies of the translation of Qur’an in Indonesian from the King Fahd Complex for the Printing of the Holy Qur’an, in coordination and cooperation with the Indonesian Ministry of Religious Affairs and a number of official associations.

The Kingdom has this year launched projects in 34 countries to provide iftar meals for around 1.2 million people throughout the holy month, which began on April 2.


MoU advances climate studies for heritage sites

Updated 14 December 2025
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MoU advances climate studies for heritage sites

RIYADH: The Heritage Commission has signed a memorandum of understanding with the National Center for Meteorology to enhance integration in climate and environmental studies related to heritage sites, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Sunday.

The MoU establishes a framework for cooperation in exchanging climate-related knowledge and studies, supporting risk assessment standards, and advancing joint workshops and research programs to improve heritage site management.

The collaboration aligns with the commission’s approach to adopting research and technological tools to better understand environmental dynamics around heritage sites and deliver sustainable solutions that support documentation, restoration, and preservation efforts.

Recently, the commission also signed an MoU with the Saudi Data and AI Authority to advance data- and AI-driven solutions in the cultural heritage sector.

The agreement enables technologies that showcase, document, and strengthen the digital presence of national heritage, the SPA reported.

It reflects both sides’ keenness to employ data and analytical technologies in the inventory, documentation, and relational analysis of cultural heritage.

The MoU aims to support decision-making and build a knowledge ecosystem grounded in accurate, measurable data. It also paves the way for joint projects to enhance digital heritage content and apply AI-based tools to interpret heritage and make it more accessible to the public.