Saudi-made car has a long way to go

Updated 24 April 2014
Follow

Saudi-made car has a long way to go

The Ministry of Commerce and Industry has given Saudi and Malaysian businesses a preliminary license to study the feasibility of building a Saudi-made car.
In a statement issued on Wednesday, the ministry stated that the company planning to set up a SR7.5 billion automotive manufacturing plant has to undergo further assessment before it can acquire a location and get government support.
The preliminary license for the Shahid automotive manufacturing facility would not allow the manufacturer to collect money from the public, the statement added.
The ministry wants to develop the automotive industry but this has to be done after careful coordination between government and the private sector, the statement said.
A thorough assessment is needed before government makes its incentives available for industrial projects, the statement said.
The ministry's advisory comes after Saudi and Malaysian businesses signed an agreement here on Tuesday to produce a Saudi-made vehicle called Meeya by 2017.
The plan is to set up a factory to produce the vehicle in Dammam, with an eventual output of 300,000 cars a year, said Rashed Othman Jawhar, chairman of the Saudi Malaysian Industrial Development Holding Company.
He said the factory would create 2,000 jobs. Major vehicle manufacturing firms from Malaysia, China, Germany, Japan and Korea are involved in the project, said Jawhar.
He said the factory would start producing 50,000 cars in the first 36 months. It would produce three types of vehicles costing between SR45,000 and SR120,000, with the possibility of a price reduction of up to 50 percent if government supports the project with land and other facilities.


More than 150 Palestinians were held on a plane for around 12 hours in South Africa

Updated 14 November 2025
Follow

More than 150 Palestinians were held on a plane for around 12 hours in South Africa

JOHANNESBURG: South African authorities faced heavy criticism Friday after they held more than 150 Palestinians, including a woman who is nine months pregnant, on a plane for around 12 hours due to complications with their travel documents.
A pastor who was allowed to meet with the passengers while they were still stuck on the plane said it was very extremely and that children were screaming and crying.
The Palestinians landed on a charter plane at Johannesburg’s O.R. Tambo International Airport on Thursday morning after a stopover in Nairobi, Kenya, South Africa’s Border Management Authority said in a statement.
The Palestinian passengers did not have exit stamps from Israeli authorities, did not indicate how long they would be staying in South Africa and had not given local addresses, leading immigration authorities to deny them entry, the statement said.
The 153 passengers including families and children were allowed to leave the plane on Thursday night after South Africa’s Ministry of Home Affairs intervened and a local non-governmental organization called Gift of the Givers offered to accommodate them. The Border Management Authority said 23 passengers had since traveled on to other countries, leaving 130 in South Africa.
Gift of the Givers founder Imtiaz Sooliman said it was the second plane carrying Palestinians to land in South Africa in the last two weeks and that the passengers themselves did not know where they were going. He said both planes were believed to be carrying people from war-torn Gaza.
It was not immediately clear who organized the charter plane.
A South African pastor who was given access to the plane while it was on the tarmac told national broadcaster SABC that many of the Palestinians now intended to claim asylum in South Africa.
South Africa has long been a supporter of the Palestinian cause and the treatment of the travelers has sparked anger.
“It’s dire,” Nigel Branken, the pastor, said in an interview with SABC on Thursday from the plane as he described the conditions. “When I came onto the plane it was excruciatingly hot. There were lots of children just sweating and screaming and crying.”
“I do not believe this is what South Africa is about. South Africa should be letting these people into the airport at the very least and letting them apply for asylum. This is their basic fundamental right guaranteed in our constitution.”