Rich pickings for fruit merchants at Buraidah Date Festival

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The Buraidah Date Festival is becoming a popular starting point for young people’s commercial endeavors. (SPA)
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The Buraidah Date Festival is becoming a popular starting point for young people’s commercial endeavors. (SPA)
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The Buraidah Date Festival is becoming a popular starting point for young people’s commercial endeavors. (SPA)
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The Buraidah Date Festival is becoming a popular starting point for young people’s commercial endeavors. (SPA)
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The Buraidah Date Festival is becoming a popular starting point for young people’s commercial endeavors. (SPA)
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Updated 24 August 2023
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Rich pickings for fruit merchants at Buraidah Date Festival

  • Young traders can be seen selling watermelons, grapes, vegetables and dates during their respective growing seasons
  • Abdulmohsen Al-Bayibi: Buying and selling dates has a greater profit margin

RIYADH: The Buraidah Date Festival is becoming a popular starting point for young people’s commercial endeavors, with the fruit harvest seasons in Saudi Arabia’s Qassim region providing an ideal opportunity to boost trade.

Young traders can be seen selling watermelons, grapes, vegetables and dates during their respective growing seasons.

The exhibition attracts more than 1,200 visitors each day.

Abdulmohsen Al-Bayibi said that he has moved between agricultural commerce activities since graduating from high school, and is now in the date business.

“Buying and selling dates has a greater profit margin,” he said.

“The date season is long and they can be sold all year long, as they are either frozen or stored. Dates are also sold during the month of Ramadan.”

Al-Bayibi said that young people looking to get into the business “need to be determined, and willing to work and show up at the market at dawn, along with a little capital.”


Nitaqat Al-Mutawar Program employs 550,000 Saudis in first phase, ministry says

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Nitaqat Al-Mutawar Program employs 550,000 Saudis in first phase, ministry says

  • Since launching 3 years ago, program surpasses first-phase target of 340,000 jobs

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Nitaqat Al-Mutawar Program, which aims to stimulate the private sector to localize jobs, has helped in employing more than 550,000 Saudis over three years since its launch, surpassing the first-phase target of 340,000 jobs introduced in 2022, according to the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development.

Taking to its official account on X, the ministry said the results helped reduce unemployment rates and enhance Saudi workforce participation in the private sector.

The ministry launched the second phase of the program on Thursday, running for the next three years, to further localize more than 340,000 additional jobs for Saudis in the private sector.

Describing it as a very encouraging and welcome result, Dr. Osama Ghanem Al-Obaidy, adviser and professor of law at the Institute of Public Administration, Riyadh, told Arab News: “This remarkable increase in the number of Saudis employed is a result of the Saudi government’s efforts to increase the rate of employment in terms of Saudi human capital benefiting from this pioneer program.

“The government is committed to reducing unemployment among Saudis in accordance with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030,” he added.

Notably, Minister of Human Resources and Social Development Ahmed bin Sulaiman Al-Rajhi said in December that the number of Saudis working in the private sector reached 2.5 million employees.

The Nitaqat Al-Mutawar program offers advantages, represented by a phase-wise transparent localization plan for a period of three years, in order to raise organizational stability in the private sector, providing clear Saudization rate expectations to give businesses time for strategic workforce planning, fostering regulatory stability and supporting the national workforce.