Saudi Arabia welcomes Slovenia’s recognition of State of Palestine

A Palestinian flag flutters among other flags in front of the Slovenian parliament after Slovenia recognized a Palestinian state, in Ljubljana, June 5, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 05 June 2024
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Saudi Arabia welcomes Slovenia’s recognition of State of Palestine

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia on Wednesday welcomed Slovenia’s ratification of its parliament and government’s decision to recognize the State of Palestine.

“While the Kingdom appreciates the decision of the Republic of Slovenia, which affirms the agreement of the international community on the right of the Palestinian people to establish their independent state on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital, it renews its call to the rest of the countries of the world that have not yet recognized it to speed up taking such positive steps, especially the permanent members of the UN Security Council,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

Slovenia on Tuesday became the latest country to recognize a state of Palestine, following similar moves made last week by Spain, Ireland and Norway.

The action means that 146 of the 193 UN member states now recognize a Palestinian state, including most Middle Eastern, African, Latin American and Asian countries, but not the US, Canada, most of Western Europe, Australia, Japan or South Korea.

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation also welcomed Slovenia’s decision, calling it an “important and historic step” that “advances the achievement of justice and freedom for the Palestinian people, and affirms their legitimate rights, including their right to self-determination.”

The OIC also renewed its call for all countries that have not yet recognized the State of Palestine to take the initiative “within the framework of supporting international efforts aimed at achieving peace and stability in the region in accordance with the vision of the two-state solution and based on the relevant international legitimacy resolutions.”


Leading AI company to partner with Saudi Arabia, CEO tells Arab News

Updated 06 February 2026
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Leading AI company to partner with Saudi Arabia, CEO tells Arab News

  • Argentum’s Andrew Sobko: ‘Very easy’ to build new infrastructure, data centers in Kingdom
  • In 2024, Saudi Arabia announced $100bn plan to establish AI hub

CHICAGO: The founder and CEO of Argentum AI, one of the world’s leading artificial intelligence companies, has told Arab News that he is looking forward to partnering with Saudi Arabia.

Ukrainian-born Andrew Sobko, based in Chicago, said Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has made a significant commitment to AI use.

In 2024, Saudi Arabia announced a $100 billion plan under Vision 2030 to build a hub to develop technology and data centers to handle a significant portion of the world’s AI workload.

The Kingdom reportedly expects AI to contribute more than $135.2 billion to its gross domestic product by 2030, representing roughly 12.4 percent of its economy.

“The US still is the kind of core leader of this AI innovation, development and infrastructure, but we quickly realized that Saudi Arabia sees this as an important asset class, not just as an innovation,” Sobko said.

“They’re deploying tons of capital. If you try to build some new infrastructure or data center, it’s very easy to do it in Saudi Arabia,” he added. “Saudi Arabia realizes and sees this compute as almost like a second asset class after oil.”

The term “compute” refers to the process of calculations that fuels AI development and applications in everyday use.

“The Middle East wants to be one of the largest exporters of compute. They realized that a couple of years ago and they’re aggressively expanding,” Sobko said, adding that AI is being used more and more in industries such as sports, in which Saudi Arabia has invested heavily.

Argentum AI recently added Majed Al-Sorour, CEO of the Saudi Golf Federation, to its board.

“Majed is also a huge believer in AI and AI infrastructure,” said Sobko. “With the help of Majed, we’re focusing on global expansion. He’s leading charge on that.”

Sobko said the challenge is not simply recognizing the importance of AI, but the ability to power data centers that it requires, and Saudi Arabia recognizes that need.

“If you secure a significant amount of power and you have data center capacity, you can actually control this kind of compute and AI,” he added.

“And the biggest bottleneck to continue expanding as we enter into this new age of robotics industry, it needs a lot more compute.”

Following meetings with US leadership, including President Donald Trump last November, Saudi Arabia secured agreements on AI technology transfers, aiming to avoid reliance on other nations’ systems.