Saudi hero Al-Rajhi faces tough challenge in defense of Dakar title

Saudi Arabia’s first winner Yazheed Al-Rajhi will try to defend his Dakar Rally title when the two-week ​event starts in the desert kingdom on Saturday, with Toyota’s 2025 runner-up Henk Lategan predicting the closest battle yet. (Instagram/@yazeedracing)
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Updated 02 January 2026
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Saudi hero Al-Rajhi faces tough challenge in defense of Dakar title

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s first winner Yazheed Al-Rajhi will try to defend his Dakar Rally title when the two-week ​event starts in the desert kingdom on Saturday, with Toyota’s 2025 runner-up Henk Lategan predicting the closest battle yet.

The annual endurance challenge, run over 13 stages and some 8,000km entirely in Saudi Arabia for the seventh year in a row, kicks off with a short prologue around Yanbu on the Red Sea coast before a 305km special stage on Sunday.

Drivers must negotiate terrain including towering sand dunes, canyons and vast desert expanses with stage six the longest stretch at 920km.

Toyota have won three of the last four Dakars in the top T1+ car category, ‌last year with ‌Al-Rajhi in the customer Overdrive team, but face a tough ‌challenge ⁠from ​Ford ‌and Dacia’s array of champions in what is also the first round of the World Rally-Raid Championship (W2RC) season.

Qatari Nasser Al-Attiyah, a five-times Dakar winner with three different manufacturers, is with nine-times world rally champion Sebastien Loeb, Brazil’s W2RC champion Lucas Moraes and Spaniard Cristina Gutierrez in the Dacia Sandriders team.

Loeb, whose world rally title record was equalled by fellow Frenchman Sebastien Ogier last season, is chasing his first Dakar win at the 10th attempt and this time has Al-Attiyah’s former co-driver Edouard Boulanger alongside.

Spain’s ⁠four-times winner Carlos Sainz, 63, and compatriot Nani Roma, a winner on two wheels and four, are driving Ford Raptors along ‌with former German Touring Cars (DTM) champion Mattias Ekstroem.

French veteran Stephane ‍Peterhansel, the 60-year-old winner of a record ‍14 Dakars on two wheels and four, returns with debutants Defender in the Stock production ‍category.

“I think there’s some very, very strong teams and everybody’s starting to get their cars settled now. A lot of the teams are getting to the end of the development cycle of some of the cars,” Lategan told the www.dakar.com website.

“The rules are written quite well, so I think this is probably the ​closest field of cars you’ll ever see in the Dakar. Also, one of the biggest fields you’ll ever see, so definitely there’s massive competition.

“There’s a lot ⁠of guys that can win and can fight for the podium. So, I’m expecting a really good battle.”

The Dakar always claims some big names early on and Al-Rajhi may want to show patience at the start after breaking two vertebrae last April in an incident that kept him out of competition until September.

“Our target is to win again, that’s most important. We’ll see how it is but sure the speed is there,” he said.

In the motorcycle category, Red Bull KTM rider Daniel Sanders will seek to become the first Australian to win back-to-back titles.

In a field of more than 100 bikes, Spaniard Tosha Schareina — last year’s runner-up — could still be Sanders’ biggest rival while two-times winner Ricky Brabec of the United States is also back on a Honda.

The Dakar began in 1978 ‌as a race from Paris across the Sahara to the Senegalese capital but switched to South America in 2009 for security reasons. It moved to Saudi Arabia in 2020.


EU urges Israel to halt NGO registration law, warns it puts aid for Gaza at risk

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EU urges Israel to halt NGO registration law, warns it puts aid for Gaza at risk

  • Legislation could severely restrict ability of humanitarian groups to provide aid for civilians amid one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world, officials say
  • Without nongovernmental organizations ‘humanitarian aid cannot be delivered at the scale needed to prevent further loss of life in Gaza,’ European Council warns

NEW YORK CITY: The EU on Tuesday urged Israeli authorities not to implement in its current form a new law governing the registration of international nongovernmental organizations, warning it could jeopardize life-saving humanitarian operations in Gaza and the other occupied Palestinian territories.

In a joint statement, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, Kaja Kallas, and Commissioners Hadja Lahbib and Dubravca Suica said the law could severely restrict the ability of international aid organizations to operate and deliver assistance to civilians amid one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world.

The European Council highlighted the need for “rapid, safe and unimpeded” delivery of aid and warned that without nongovernmental organizations, “humanitarian aid cannot be delivered at the scale needed to prevent further loss of life in Gaza.”

The new law, adopted by the Israeli government after the introduction of new registration requirements in March 2025, obliges foreign humanitarian organizations to provide detailed information about their operations, including full lists of local and foreign staff, as a condition for registering to operate in Palestinian areas.

Dozens of aid groups, including Doctors Without Borders, World Vision and Oxfam, face having their accreditation revoked or licenses suspended after failing to meet the new criteria by the Dec. 31 deadline that was set. Israeli authorities have said organizations that fail to meet the new requirements must cease all activities by March 1.

Critics say the rules risk undermining humanitarian principles and could endanger local staff. The Israeli measures drew international condemnation and warnings from UN agencies, which said international NGOs provide essential “humanitarian lifelines” in Gaza where they are delivering most of the healthcare, nutritional, water and sanitation services amid ongoing restrictions and closures of border crossings.

The humanitarian situation in Gaza remains dire, UN agencies have said, with winter conditions compounding the suffering of displaced populations living in makeshift shelters that expose them to heavy rain, flooding and cold.

Hundreds of thousands of people in the territory have received emergency food, shelter and winter supplies, and while famine conditions have eased since the ceasefire agreement in October, acute food insecurity, malnutrition and damage to infrastructure continues to take a toll.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said recent heavy rains have flooded tents, damaged homes and put a strain on already limited water, sanitation and health services, underscoring the need for sustained and unimpeded aid access.

The EU statement comes after the European Council on Dec. 18 welcomed a UN Security Council resolution for the establishment of a peace-building and stabilization force in Gaza, and urged all parties to implement it fully and in line with the principles of international law.