AlUla commission announces birth of two female Arabian leopard cubs

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Updated 16 August 2022
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AlUla commission announces birth of two female Arabian leopard cubs

  • The cubs were born at the Prince Saud Al-Faisal Center for Wildlife Research as part of a captivity and breeding program
  • Right now, the Arabian leopard is classified on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List as “critically endangered”

RIYADH: The Royal Commission for AlUla announced the birth of two female Arabian leopard cubs on Tuesday.

“We celebrate their arrival as we mark another milestone in our quest to restore the power of nature's balance in AlUla,” the commission said.

The cubs were born at the Prince Saud Al-Faisal Center for Wildlife Research as part of a captivity and breeding program that seeks to increase the number of Arabian leopards and resettle them in the wild, Saudi Press Agency reported.

Right now, the Arabian leopard is classified on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List as “critically endangered.” It is all but extinct in the wild.

Only a handful of the magnificent animals are thought to survive in the whole Arabian Peninsula, holding out in a last refuge in Oman’s Dhofar mountains.

The RCU’s strategy to preserve the Arabian leopard includes a variety of initiatives including the expansion of a breeding program through the opening of the Arabian Leopard Breeding Center in the Sharaan Nature Reserve, and the establishment of the Global Fund for the Arabian Leopard which the commission has allocated $25 million for.

The commitment to preserving the Arabian leopard runs deep in Saudi Arabia.In June 2016, Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan, Saudi Arabia’s minister of culture and RCU governor, signed an agreement with Panthera, committing the commission to investing $20 million over 10 years to aid global conservation of the leopard and to revitalize the Arabian leopard population.

This year, the Kingdom celebrated its first Arabian Leopard Day in February.The special occasion — which will take place annually on February 10 — seeks to raise awareness of the endangered big cat.

Rewilding Arabia
Return of the leopard is at the heart of plans to conserve and regenerate Saudi Arabia’s landscapes and wildlife

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Diriyah Co. awarded British Safety Council Sword of Honor for health and safety

Updated 6 sec ago
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Diriyah Co. awarded British Safety Council Sword of Honor for health and safety

RIYADH: Diriyah Company has been awarded the British Safety Council Sword of Honor for achieving a Five-Star Occupational Health and Safety Audit rating, becoming the first developer in the region to receive this certification.

To date, Diriyah Company has achieved a Total Recordable Incident Rate, or TRIR, of 0.017 for ongoing infrastructure projects.

Jerry Inzerillo, group CEO of Diriyah Company, said in a statement: “At Diriyah Company, safety and well-being are not just priorities; they are the foundation of everything we do.

“This important recognition from the British Safety Council highlights our commitment to world-class systems and processes, as well as setting new benchmarks in health, safety and crisis management.”

Peter McGettrick, chairman of the British Safety Council, added: “On behalf of the board of trustees and staff of British Safety Council I would like to offer my sincere congratulations to Diriyah Company on achieving their Five Star Audit and receiving the Sword of Honor this year.

“I applaud you for attaining the highest standards of health and safety management.

“Achieving recognition of this sort takes absolute dedication and the utmost professionalism.”

The Five Star Audit is a comprehensive, contemporary and quantified process that benchmarks health and safety management performance against the latest best-practice techniques.

Diriyah Company underwent a comprehensive, quantified and robust evaluation of its occupational health and safety policies, processes and practices.

The audit process included documentation review, interviews with senior management, employees and other key stakeholders, together with sampling of operational activities.

The audit measured performance against key health and safety management best-practice indicators and a detailed review of more than 50 component elements.

The British Safety Council’s Sword of Honor and Five-Star Audit rating are globally recognized benchmarks for excellence in health and safety management systems and highlight Diriyah Company’s commitment to fostering a culture of safety and protecting tens of thousands of workers, assets and operations at every level.

Diriyah, the City of Earth, will contribute about $18.6 billion (SR70 billion) directly to the Kingdom’s GDP, create more than 180,000 jobs and will be home to an estimated 100,000 people.

It will also include modern office space for tens of thousands of professionals in technology, media, the arts and education, museums, a university, the Royal Diriyah Opera House, the Diriyah Arena, as well as food and beverage outlets and nearly 40 world-class resorts and hotels across two of its main masterplans.

The company has a workforce of 50,000 and a heavy equipment fleet of more than 2,500 across its development area.