Registration opens for Ibdaa Scientific Olympiad 2025

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In Ibdaa 2024, Mawhiba selected 180 projects from 210,000 submissions. (SPA)
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In Ibdaa 2024, Mawhiba selected 180 projects from 210,000 submissions. (SPA)
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In Ibdaa 2024, Mawhiba selected 180 projects from 210,000 submissions. (SPA)
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Updated 28 August 2024
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Registration opens for Ibdaa Scientific Olympiad 2025

RIYADH: The King Abdulaziz and his Companions Foundation for Giftedness and Creativity, also known as Mawhiba, has begun registration for next year’s National Olympiad for Scientific Creativity, or Ibdaa.

Intermediate and secondary-stage Saudi students can register for Ibdaa 2025 until Sept. 30, provided they have a scientific project in one of 22 national priority areas.

The Olympiad involves six stages: Student registration and training, project submission to the Mawhiba website, electronic project evaluation, local exhibitions and workshops, the Ibdaa Science and Engineering Fair, and selecting students to compete in the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair 2025 in the US.

Mawhiba Secretary-General Amal Al-Hazaa has praised the partnership with the Saudi Ministry of Education for its role in fostering Saudi talents and enhancing students’ capabilities.

In Ibdaa 2024, Mawhiba selected 180 projects from 210,000 submissions, including projects in energy, materials science, chemistry, environmental engineering, biomedicine, health sciences, and plant sciences.

In the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair 2024, 35 Saudi students competed against 1,700 participants from 70 countries in Los Angeles.


Riyadh emerges as Gulf evacuation hub for wealthy amid regional escalation

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Riyadh emerges as Gulf evacuation hub for wealthy amid regional escalation

  • Saudi capital’s King Khalid International Airport is among the few major airports in the region still operating normally after Iranian missile and drone strikes

RIYADH: Riyadh has become a principal evacuation hub for wealthy residents and senior executives seeking to leave the Gulf amid escalating regional tensions, according to a report by Semafor.

The Saudi capital’s King Khalid International Airport is among the few major airports in the region still operating normally after Iranian missile and drone strikes targeted cities including Dubai and Abu Dhabi over the weekend, as well as locations in Qatar and Bahrain.

With airspace closures elsewhere, stranded executives and high-net-worth individuals have been travelling overland to Riyadh, in some cases undertaking a roughly 10-hour journey from Dubai, in order to board private or commercial flights out of the region.

Citing people familiar with the arrangements, Semafor reported that private security firms have been hiring fleets of SUVs to transport clients to the Saudi capital before arranging chartered aircraft departures.

Those being evacuated include senior figures at global financial institutions as well as affluent individuals who had been in the Gulf for business or leisure.

The surge in demand has sharply increased costs.

Ameerh Naran, chief executive of private jet brokerage Vimana Private, told Semafor that Riyadh is currently “the only real option” for those seeking to exit the region, with private jet charters from the Saudi capital to Europe reaching as much as $350,000.

Alternative routes have narrowed. Security providers initially explored using Oman as an exit corridor, but that option became unviable after reported Iranian strikes on the country’s port infrastructure and a tanker, leaving Riyadh as the most accessible transit point, the report said.

Riyadh’s role marks a notable shift in regional risk perception. In previous years, security concerns — including cross-border Houthi attacks during the Yemen conflict and earlier periods of regional instability — had led many expatriates and business leaders to favour other Gulf cities as transit hubs.

However, Saudi Arabia’s more flexible visa regime, which now allows many nationalities to obtain visas on arrival, combined with the kingdom’s ability so far to keep its airspace open, has reinforced its position as a temporary gateway out of the region.

While some schools have moved to remote learning and certain companies have advised staff to work from home, Semafor reported that daily life in Riyadh has largely continued uninterrupted compared with other Gulf cities that have faced direct attacks.