Why organizations in Saudi Arabia are moving to Google Cloud — with Bespin Global

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Updated 05 October 2025
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Why organizations in Saudi Arabia are moving to Google Cloud — with Bespin Global

As Saudi Arabia accelerates its digital transformation under Vision 2030, organizations across the Kingdom are re-evaluating their cloud strategies. One major trend being seen at Bespin Global MEA is the growing adoption of Google Cloud, especially following the launch of the Google Cloud region in Dammam. 

With enhanced data sovereignty, low-latency services, and compliance with local regulations, Google Cloud is rapidly becoming the platform of choice for organizations looking to modernize operations and scale efficiently. As a Premier Google Cloud Partner and Managed Services Provider, Bespin Global MEA has helped leading enterprises across industries transition smoothly, unlocking tangible benefits in security, reliability, cost-optimization, and innovation. 

Why organizations are switching to Google Cloud 

1. Enterprise-grade security 

Security remains the top concern for CIOs and CISOs. Google Cloud’s built-in security features such as Cloud Identity, Identity and Access Management, and a security-first global infrastructure, offer a robust foundation. Bespin Global MEA builds upon this with customized security architectures, 24/7 threat monitoring, and compliance frameworks tailored to sector-specific needs, from finance to healthcare. 

2. Unmatched reliability 

Downtime is not just inconvenient; it directly impacts customer trust and business continuity. Google Cloud’s advanced features, including live migration and automated failovers, keep systems running smoothly, even during updates. With Bespin Global’s proactive monitoring and incident response, clients experience significantly improved uptime and operational resilience. 

3. Scalability and elasticity 

Organizations in Saudi Arabia are growing fast. Whether expanding internationally or responding to sudden surges in demand, Google Cloud’s architecture supports real-time scaling. With Kubernetes auto-scaling, elastic workloads, and intelligent resource allocation, scalability becomes seamless. Bespin Global designs cloud environments that flex with your growth, ensuring long-term agility. 

4. Cost transparency and optimization 

Cloud budgets can spiral without oversight. Google Cloud’s pricing model, featuring pay-as-you-go, committed use discounts, and spot instances offers real cost control. Bespin Global further enhances this with FinOps services, including budget forecasting, cloud spend governance, and optimization strategies. 

One standout offering is the OpsNow platform: a smart invoicing and cost-management system powered by AI. It includes anomaly detection, cost chargeback by department, and real-time insights that help organizations track and control cloud expenses effectively. 

5. Innovation-ready toolset 

From AI and analytics to modern application development, Google Cloud is packed with cutting-edge tools like BigQuery, Cloud Spanner, and Gemini AI. Bespin Global enables clients to turn these tools into business value, consolidating complex data environments into real-time analytics dashboards that empower smart, fast decision-making. 

Why choose Bespin Global? 

Bespin Global MEA stands at the forefront of cloud innovation in the Kingdom. With hundreds of successful migrations across the MENA region, the company goes beyond simple lift-and-shift projects. Its approach is strategic, hands-on, and outcome-driven. 

The company provides: 

  • Cloud strategy and assessment 
  • Seamless, zero-downtime migrations 
  • Secure, scalable GCP architectures 
  • Compliance and security configuration 
  • 24/7 managed services and cloud optimization 

Whether you are in finance, healthcare, retail, or the public sector, Bespin Global helps you maximize your Google Cloud investment, turning cloud into a growth engine. 

To learn more, visit: www.bespinglobal.sa


Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development helps combat tropical diseases in Africa

Updated 15 December 2025
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Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development helps combat tropical diseases in Africa

The Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development is a leading contributor to health and development initiatives in many developing countries, especially in Africa, where tropical and neglected diseases continue to threaten public health and economic resilience. Through financing, technical support, and long-term development strategies, the fund plays a central role in strengthening health infrastructure, improving healthcare access, and supporting global efforts to reduce the burden of infectious and neglected tropical diseases.

KFAED’s approach combines infrastructure development — such as constructing and equipping hospitals and health centers — with broader public-health support including vaccination programs, awareness campaigns, and distribution of essential medical supplies. These efforts raise healthcare standards, lower infection and mortality rates, and contribute to sustainable social and economic development across vulnerable regions.

Disease burden in Africa

More than 2 billion people worldwide suffer from tropical diseases, including nearly 500 million children. Africa bears over 40 percent of this burden, with diseases such as malaria, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, lymphatic filariasis, and cholera causing severe humanitarian and economic consequences. In addition, a group known as neglected tropical diseases disproportionately impacts the poorest communities, resulting in chronic disability, disfigurement, and death. The WHO estimates that around 700 million people in Africa alone are infected with one or more NTDs.

High infection rates are driven by limited access to preventive care, exposure to contaminated water due to inadequate sanitation, weak healthcare systems, and conditions of fragility, conflict, and displacement. These challenges impede disease control and strain national health programs.

International cooperation to combat NTDs

In response, global institutions have mobilized to support African countries in controlling and eliminating NTDs. Research identified five diseases that can be effectively controlled through mass-treatment programs: lymphatic filariasis, river blindness (onchocerciasis), schistosomiasis, soil-transmitted helminths, and trachoma.

The NTD program now spans 47 African countries, with 36 affected by all five diseases. Each year, 300–400 million people receive treatment, and 700–800 million tablets are donated by pharmaceutical manufacturers. Despite this, only about 30 percent of infected individuals currently receive the required care, largely because many live in remote areas. Delivery depends heavily on volunteer networks and regional and local organizations.

The NTD program

The NTD program strengthens national disease-control efforts through clinical, logistical, and research support. It assists governments in developing strategic plans, conducting epidemiological studies, mapping disease distribution, evaluating program impact, and coordinating awareness and prevention campaigns. The World Health Organization oversees administrative and technical operations in partnership with several global bodies. Funding flows either directly from donors to field agencies or through pooled trust funds managed by institutions such as the World Bank and WHO.

The program targets five high-impact diseases:

  1. Lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis): A parasitic disease transmitted by mosquitoes, affecting around 900 million people worldwide. Africa accounts for roughly 30 percent of cases, with more than 400 million people at risk.
  2. River blindness (onchocerciasis): Caused by filarial worms transmitted by blackflies, leading to blindness and chronic skin disease. About 250 million people are infected globally, 90 percent of them in Africa.
  3. Schistosomiasis (bilharzia): A waterborne disease affecting the digestive system and liver. Around 300 million people are infected worldwide, 90 percent in Africa.
  4. Soil-transmitted helminths: Parasitic worms transmitted through contaminated soil. Around 1.5 billion people worldwide are at risk, with over 290 million Africans requiring annual treatment.
  5. Trachoma: A bacterial eye infection that can cause irreversible blindness. About 2.2 million people globally suffer vision impairment due to trachoma, with nearly 185 million living in at-risk areas in Africa.

These diseases were selected due to the availability of free preventive medications, accessible field-survey tools, the ability to deliver multiple treatments simultaneously, and strong governmental commitment within affected countries.

Funding and global partnerships

KFAED is among the earliest and most consistent supporters of the NTD program. It contributed $5 million during Phase 1 (2016–2020) and another $5 million for Phase 2 (2024–2028). Other contributors include the World Bank, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, African Development Bank, USAID, the UK Department for International Development, pharmaceutical companies, NGOs, and African governments.

Kuwait Fund’s long-term role in Africa

Since 1974, the Kuwait Fund has financed multiple disease-control programs across Africa, particularly targeting river blindness. Its investments include:

  • First Onchocerciasis Control Program: Covering 11 West African countries.
  • Second Onchocerciasis Control Program: Supporting 20 additional countries in Central, Eastern, and Southern Africa.

Beyond NTD programs, the fund has provided more than $23 million in grants and technical assistance for global health initiatives, including the Guinea Worm Eradication Program, Roll Back Malaria, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis, and national programs combating transboundary animal diseases.

KFAED has also financed over 70 health-sector projects worth approximately 196.7 million Kuwaiti dinars ($630 million), enhancing infrastructure, equipment, and healthcare access across many developing countries — most of them in Africa.