Doctors, architects, and engineers flock to Riyadh Winter Wonderland for Professions Day

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Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)
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Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)
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Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)
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Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)
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Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)
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Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)
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Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)
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Updated 16 December 2022
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Doctors, architects, and engineers flock to Riyadh Winter Wonderland for Professions Day

  • “As doctors, my friends and I arrived today to celebrate with everyone else, check out their uniforms, and have fun,” Mussab Jaber, who is studying medicine, told Arab News

RIYADH: Riyadh Winter Wonderland hosted a special Professions Day on Thursday as part of Riyadh Season. Participants who came along dressed in their uniforms received a free pass to Winter Wonderland — one of Riyadh Season’s main zones.

“As doctors, my friends and I arrived today to celebrate with everyone else, check out their uniforms, and have fun,” Mussab Jaber, who is studying medicine, told Arab News.

According to architects Nasser Bahamdan and Abdulrahman Al-Bahoth, who wore safety helmets and vests, the event demonstrates the variety of professions practiced by Saudis.




Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)

“We heard about Professions Day and came to see how everyone was dressed and if there were any other architects here,” Bahamdan said. “Everyone is dressed to reflect their profession, which is cool.”

Ateeq Al-Shahrani, a student of aviation technology, arrived with his peers in an aviation uniform. He said his college had encouraged him to participate.

“Our college emailed us about Professions Day and encouraged us to participate and show off our uniform, which bears the International Aviation Technical College logo, our names, and this red line on the shoulder that represents which year you are in; I’m a freshman, so I have one line,” Al-Shahrani said.




Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)

Ghaith Al-Enazi, a refrigeration technician, said he had heard that many people were coming, so he wanted to come and see what people were wearing.

“We refrigeration technicians wear overalls or jumpsuits, safety shoes, and a helmet,” he said. “I think it’s great to be proud of what you do for a living.”

Doctor Zahraa Al-Abdullah arrived wearing a lab coat and said she had come to play with her children.  




Visitors to Riyadh Winter Wonderland wore their professional attire in honor of special Professions Day, organized by Riyadh season on Thursday, where participants also received a free pass to the zone. (Photo/Abdulaziz Al-Arify)

“I’m happy to see how my profession is influencing my children,” she told Arab News. “As a mother and a doctor, work can sometimes cause us to drift from our families, but today I find it amusing that I can come in with my lab coat and feel appreciated by my kids, who are asking me why people are taking pictures of me.”

Many children took part in the festival themselves, dressing up as musicians, astronauts, chefs, and other professionals.

One of them, Baraa Halwani, who was dressed as a chef, told Arab News: “I’m wearing a chef’s uniform because I enjoy cooking and want to have fun and play in Winter Wonderland with my friends.”  


Threat to Kingdom’s security is ‘red line’ that will be ‘addressed and neutralized,’ Saudi envoy says

Updated 14 January 2026
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Threat to Kingdom’s security is ‘red line’ that will be ‘addressed and neutralized,’ Saudi envoy says

  • Abdulaziz Alwasil tells UN Security Council the situation in southern Yemen is ‘a just cause with social and historic dimensions’ that can only be resolved through dialogue
  • Recent military activity in the south was unilateral, resulting in an escalation that harms the interests of Yemeni people and undermines efforts to address issues in the south, he said

NEW YORK CITY: Any attempt to threaten Saudi Arabia’s national security is a “red line” and will be met with decisive action, the Kingdom’s ambassador to the UN told the Security Council on Wednesday.

Speaking during a meeting of the council to discuss Yemen, Abdulaziz Alwasil said the situation in the south of the country is “a just cause with social and historic dimensions” that can only be resolved through dialogue.

“We stress that any attempt to threaten our national security is a red line, and we will not hesitate to take the necessary actions and steps to address it and neutralize it,” he added.

Alwasil reaffirmed Saudi Arabia’s support for Yemeni President Rashad Al-Alimi, the Presidential Leadership Council, and the Yemeni government in their efforts to achieve security, stability, development and peace while preserving national unity.

He said military activity by Southern Transitional Council forces in Hadramout and Al-Mahra on Dec. 2, 2025, was unilateral, did not have the approval of the Presidential Leadership Council, and was not carried out in coordination with the Coalition to Restore Legitimacy in Yemen.

It had resulted in an unjustified escalation that harmed the interests of the Yemeni people, undermined efforts to address the issues in the south, and ran counter to the coalition’s objectives, Alwasil added.

The Kingdom, working with its coalition partners, the Presidential Leadership Council and the Yemeni government, had moved to contain the situation by dispatching a military force to coordinate arrangements with the Southern Transitional Council in Aden, he said.

The aim was to ensure the return of the southern council’s forces to their previous positions outside of Hadramout and Al-Mahra, and the handover of camps to legitimate government forces and local authorities in line with agreed procedures, Alwasil added.

He expressed regret over the military operations that took place in Hadramout and Al-Mahra, close to Saudi Arabia’s southern border, which he said posed a direct threat to the Kingdom’s national security, as well as the security of Yemen and regional stability. Such steps were extremely dangerous, he added, and contradicted the principles on which the Coalition to Restore Legitimacy in Yemen had been founded.

Alwasil welcomed a prisoner and detainee exchange agreement signed in Muscat on Dec. 23, which he described as an important humanitarian measure to alleviate suffering and build confidence.

He praised Oman for hosting and sponsoring the consultations and supporting negotiations, and commended the efforts of UN’s special envoy for Yemen, Hans Grundberg, the International Committee of the Red Cross and all others that has played a part.

Regarding the political efforts to resolve the crisis, Alwasil said Saudi Arabia welcomed President Al-Alimi’s call for an inclusive conference in Riyadh to bring together all stakeholders to discuss just solutions to the situation in southern Yemen.

Preparations for the conference have begun, he added, in cooperation with the Yemeni government and southern representatives, reflecting the close ties between the two countries and their shared interests in stabilizing Yemen.

He urged all southern stakeholders to participate actively and constructively in the talks, to help find comprehensive and just solutions that meet the legitimate aspirations of the people of southern Yemen.

Alwasil called on all Yemeni forces and stakeholders to cooperate and intensify their efforts to reach a lasting political settlement that would ensure security and stability.

He described the southern issue as “a just cause with social and historic dimensions,” adding that “the only way to address it is through dialogue that leads to a comprehensive political solution” based on nationally and internationally agreed terms of reference.