Ministerial Council Meeting of Middle East Green Initiative takes place in Jeddah

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Updated 30 January 2026
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Ministerial Council Meeting of Middle East Green Initiative takes place in Jeddah

The second session of the Ministerial Council Meeting of the Middle East Green Initiative took place in Jeddah, chaired by Minister of Environment, Water and Agriculture Abdulrahman Al-Fadley, who is also chairperson of the current session of the council. 

A total of 31 regional member countries took part in the session, alongside the UK as an observer, as well as many international organizations and institutions. 

During the meeting, Saudi Arabia underscored the importance of unifying global efforts to confront environmental challenges, rehabilitate degraded land, expand vegetation cover, and secure a sustainable quality of life for future generations. 

In his opening remarks, Al-Fadley welcomed four new member states: Ghana, Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka, and Syria. 

Saudi Arabia launched the Middle East Green Initiative at its first summit in Riyadh in October 2021.

 

 


Iranian ambassador thanks Saudi for not allowing territory to be used during war

Updated 43 min 55 sec ago
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Iranian ambassador thanks Saudi for not allowing territory to be used during war

  • Alireza Enayati tells AFP Iran appreciates Kingdom's pledge not to allow its 'airspace, waters, or territory' to be used in US attacks
  • Envoy also denies that his country hit the US embassy in Riyadh this week with drones

RIYADH: Iran’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia Alireza Enayati said on Thursday his country remained appreciative of Saudi Arabia’s pledge to not allow its airspace or territory to be used during the ongoing war with the US and Israel.
“We appreciate what we have repeatedly heard from Saudi Arabia — that it does not allow its airspace, waters, or territory to be used against the Islamic Republic of Iran,” he told AFP.
Before the outbreak of war, Riyadh had thrown its support behind diplomatic efforts to diffuse tensions between Tehran and Washington and vowed that its airspace would not be allowed to be used for attacks against Iran.
Enayati also categorically denied that his country hit the US embassy in Riyadh this week, after Saudi officials said Iran targeted the compound with drones.
Saudi Arabia has repeatedly accused Tehran of launching missile salvos and drone attacks at its territory and warned that the kingdom reserved the right to defend itself, including by retaliating.
Iran had earlier denied attacking the sprawling Ras Tanura refinery — one of the largest in the Middle East — which Riyadh had also accused Tehran of targeting twice with drones.
Enayati added to the denial, saying Iran also had no hand in the targeting of the US embassy that triggered a fire at the compound.
“We confirmed that Iran has no role in the attack on the US embassy in Riyadh,” the ambassador told AFP.
“If the operations command in Tehran attacks somewhere, it takes responsibility for it.”
The war in the Middle East has engulfed the otherwise stable Gulf region as Iran retaliates over US and Israeli strikes that killed its supreme leader, launching strikes at Israel, the wider region and beyond.
At least 13 people have been killed in the Gulf, including seven civilians, since Iran began its attacks on Saturday.
Enayati, however, denied that Iran was waging a regional war as retaliation for the attacks on his country by the US and Israel.
“This is not a regional war and it is not our war. It was imposed on the region,” he told AFP.