Saudi ambassador to UK discusses Vision 2030 with Oxford university students

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Prince Khalid bin Bandar welcomed the university delegation at the Saudi embassy in the capital, London. (Twitter/@SaudiEmbassyUK)
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Prince Khalid bin Bandar welcomed the university delegation at the Saudi embassy in the capital, London. (Twitter/@SaudiEmbassyUK)
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Updated 17 May 2023
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Saudi ambassador to UK discusses Vision 2030 with Oxford university students

LONDON: Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to the UK Prince Khalid bin Bandar on Tuesday received a number of students from the University of Oxford to discuss the Kingdom’s transformation under its Vision 2030.

Prince Khalid welcomed the university delegation at the embassy in the capital, London, which included a number of students majoring in international relations, political science and international security.

During the meeting, the ambassador spoke about the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 and its economic goals, and plans for diversification by attracting foreign investment. 

He also touched on the Kingdom’s education sector and its development over the past fifty years, as well as issues of regional and global concern to the Kingdom.

“It was a pleasure to hear the students’ questions about the Kingdom and the region,” Prince Khalid said in a tweet.


Saudi photographer brings Madinah into focus

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Saudi photographer brings Madinah into focus

  • Shaker Samargandi’s work captures the city’s layered identity in intimate detail
  • Approach has allowed architecture to be presented as a living element, one that interacts with light and the passage of time

MAKKAH: Through a deeply personal lens, Saudi Arabia photographer Shaker Samargandi is presenting a contemporary vision of Madinah.

Born and raised in Madinah, he says his familiarity with the city’s rhythms and spaces has shaped his artistic vision.

Rather than treating the holy city as a staged subject, Samargandi approaches it as “a living memory.” Through his lens, streets, courtyards and architecture become narrative elements revealing the city’s layered identity.

Samargandi told Arab News that Islamic architecture, especially that associated with the Prophet’s Mosque, has been a central focus of his visual interest, given its spiritual and aesthetic values deeply rooted in history.

He says his focus is not directed toward the overall scene, but the fine details that reflect the philosophy and aesthetics of the structure, allowing the viewer to contemplate the relationship between form and meaning.

This approach has allowed architecture to be presented as a living element, one that interacts with light and the passage of time.

Madinah’s geography plays a role, Samargandi explained. Mountains and harrat lava fields meet farms and palm groves within the urban fabric, creating a distinctive interplay between nature and urban life.

For the photographer, this relationship underscores how place is formed through constant interaction between landscape and people.

He says residents have often responded to his work by seeing their city from unfamiliar angles, prompting renewed reflection on their everyday surroundings.

Samargandi is now developing long-term projects, including a photo book documenting Madinah. For him, visual documentation carries cultural responsibility, particularly as the city undergoes rapid urban and social transformation.

Photography, he says, is not merely archival, it preserves daily details and aesthetic character for future generations while offering a tool to understand and rediscover place.

He further explained that working on long-term projects allows for a deeper understanding of a place, away from the fast pace of visual consumption.

Samargandi believes Madinah still holds, for the artist, vast territories and stories to be explored, that engage the present and honor the city’s roots.