Second edition of Rally Jameel launches across AlUla desert

The event has attracted female rally drivers from around the world since its inaugural running last year. (Courtesy Rally Jameel)
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Updated 09 March 2023
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Second edition of Rally Jameel launches across AlUla desert

  • Race dedicated exclusively to female drivers will conclude on March 11

ALULA: Rally Jameel 2023 kicked off in AlUla on Wednesday, with leading female drivers from the region and the rest of the world competing in a race that will conclude in Al-Qassim on March 11.

The event has attracted female rally drivers from around the world since its inaugural running last year.

“I really can’t describe my feelings,” said Saudi driver Maha Alhamli. “The same nerves, the same fears, this is something we’re used to before the race. Preparation is part of the race, good preparation, too. You have to take the rally seriously and prepare for it as much as possible.”

Alhamli said that she has been studying the regulations and taking all the rules into consideration as this is her second participation, with the first race having proven a novel experience for her.

“I had a lot of questions about how the experience will look like and there were a lot of surprises and challenges. Getting stuck and having punctures, it was full of action and every accident that took place I hoped would be the last,” she said.

Other competitors, including Samara Al-Ghamdi, felt proud to have the Kingdom endorsing women’s racing.

“I would like to thank Saudi Arabia for this opportunity on International Women’s Day to test our ability in this challenge,” she said.

Bayan Zakaria, who has been taking part in go-karting and motocross since she was a child, said: “It’s a great opportunity to start experiencing the rally and navigation in Rally Jameel. We had the opportunity and jumped right into it.”

Last year’s launch of Rally Jameel caught the eye of other drivers.

“Last year I read about (the race) and saw it, and I was like, ‘why didn’t I participate?’. So this year, when I knew the time and date, I was definitely going to start,” said Saz Aso Jafaar.

Jasmeet Kaur Batra from India said that her team have competed in many rallies in her home country and are champions at a national stage there.

“But we have never done anything like this there. So this is our first time in a desert, our first time in this kind of a terrain,” she said.

For Sahar Darwa, who is navigating for the first time with a professional rally driver, the prospect of racing was terrifying.

“But as soon as we went on the road and did the first navigation, I felt very calm,” she said. “I had to learn how to navigate. That’s it. So we went through the road book. We took our notes. We had to study all the signs,” she said.


Final preparations ramp up as Dakar Rally 2026 draws closer

Updated 22 December 2025
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Final preparations ramp up as Dakar Rally 2026 draws closer

  • World’s toughest endurance race scheduled for seventh consecutive year in Kingdom

YANBU: Final preparations for Saudi Arabia’s Dakar Rally 2026 have entered their concluding phase, with less than two weeks to go until the world’s toughest endurance race gets underway in the Kingdom for a seventh consecutive year.

Held under the auspices of the Ministry of Sport and organized by the Saudi Automobile and Motorcycle Federation in partnership with the Saudi Motorsport Company, the rally runs from Jan. 3-17 and features 14 race days, including a prologue and 13 competitive stages.

A milestone was reached in logistical operations last week when two vessels carrying rally vehicles and equipment from Barcelona arrived at King Fahd Industrial Port in Yanbu.

Technical scrutineering for all competing vehicles is scheduled for Jan. 1-2, marking the final step before competition begins.

This year’s event will feature 812 competitors representing 69 nationalities and competing across 433 vehicles in a wide range of categories.

The entry list includes 73 ultimate cars, 118 motorbikes, 46 trucks, 38 challengers, 43 side-by-side vehicles, eight stock vehicles, 75 classic cars, 24 classic trucks, and seven Mission 1000 motorbikes, as well as a Mission 1000 truck, highlighting the rally’s scale and diversity.

The action begins on Saturday, Jan. 3, with a 23-km prologue in Yanbu, followed by Stage 1 on Jan. 4, a 305-km loop starting and finishing in the coastal city.

The route then heads to AlUla for Stages 2 and 3 before continuing through a demanding sequence of desert stages across the Kingdom.

Competitors will race from AlUla to a bivouac refuge on Jan. 7, then to Hail the day after and Riyadh on Jan. 9, ahead of a rest day on Jan. 10.

The second half of the rally resumes with stages through Wadi Al-Dawasir, Bisha and Al-Henakiyah, before the event concludes back in Yanbu on Jan. 17.

Saudi Arabia’s continued hosting of the Dakar Rally underscores its growing status as a global hub for motorsport and international sporting events.

The Kingdom is the only country to host a broad spectrum of elite motorsport competitions, including Formula One, Formula E, the FIA World Rally Championship and Extreme H, alongside the Dakar Rally.