Saudi Arabia’s KSrelief distributes over 282 tons of food aid worldwide

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Syrian and Palestinian refugees living across Lebanon received 174 tons of food. (SPA)
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in Bangladesh, 24 tons of food baskets were distributed to 6,000 people. (SPA)
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Updated 17 April 2023
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Saudi Arabia’s KSrelief distributes over 282 tons of food aid worldwide

  • Syrian and Palestinian refugees living across Lebanon received 174 tons of food

RIYADH: The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) distributed over 282 tons of food aid in six countries across the world, Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.

Syrian and Palestinian refugees living across Lebanon received 174 tons of food.

In Senegal, 19 tons of food aid were distributed to 285 disadvantaged families in the Waakem region of Dakar while in Bangladesh, 24 tons of food baskets were given to 6,000 people.

KSrelief also provided over 32 tons of food to 3,000 people in Chad and 29.8 more tons to 3,100 people in need in Niger.

In Albania, four tons of food aid were delivered to 660 people as part of a project that aims to distribute 2,000 food baskets across the country.

The distribution “comes as part of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s relief and humanitarian efforts through its KSrelief arm to support people in need and countries worldwide,” the SPA statement read.


Saudi Arabia to hold Human Capability Initiative conference in Riyadh in May

Updated 12 February 2026
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Saudi Arabia to hold Human Capability Initiative conference in Riyadh in May

  • HCI 2026 set to attract over 15,000 leaders, 250 speakers, including policymakers, industry leaders, experts from various sectors
  • Program to focus on optimizing learning, working environments to maximize human capability in age of AI

LONDON: Saudi Arabia’s Human Capability Development Program has announced the third edition of the Human Capability Initiative conference, featuring the UK as the country of honor.

The HCI will be held under the patronage of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the King Abdulaziz International Conference Center in Riyadh, from May 3-4.

HCI 2026 is set to attract over 15,000 leaders and feature 250 speakers, including policymakers, industry leaders, and experts from various sectors.

Under the theme “The Human Code,” the program will focus on optimizing learning and working environments to maximize human capability in the age of artificial intelligence.

Yousef bin Abdullah Al-Benyan, Saudi Arabia's minister of education and chairman of the Executive Committee of the HCDP, said the conference would showcase the Kingdom’s commitment to investing in people for sustainable economic growth and to enriching a global dialogue.

He added: “Human potential remains the most critical driver of progress in a rapidly changing global landscape, and investing in humans is the most critical pillar in building a competitive economy and a knowledge-based society.”

Majid Al-Kassabi, the Saudi minister of commerce and chairman of the Economic and Social Committee of the Saudi-British Strategic Partnership Council, welcomed the UK as the conference’s country of honor.

He said: “(This) represents a continuation of the strategic cooperation between (Saudi Arabia and the UK), including the launch of the Skills of the Future initiative at the 2025 HCI conference, focused on advancing economic cooperation, educational exchange, and workforce development.”

The last two HCI conferences attracted over 23,000 participants, featured 550 speakers, and announced 156 partnerships, organizers said.

The HCDP aligns with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, focusing on enhancing citizens’ potential and competitiveness, they added.