Heard at Shoura: Expat driver shortage? Let women drive...

Updated 15 April 2016
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Heard at Shoura: Expat driver shortage? Let women drive...

JEDDAH: A Shoura Council member has launched an appeal for women to drive because of the difficulty and costs faced by citizens to recruit foreign drivers, according to a local media report on Thursday.
Speaking during a discussion on the Labor Ministry’s draft recruitment pact with Chad, Sultan Al-Sultan said: “Why not create an environment for women to drive instead of waiting to recruit drivers from another country and then discover they cannot drive, not to mention the financial costs involved,” he said.
He said the current situation did not make sense if women are only allowed to drive in a car with a mahram. “Then why do we allow them to go to work and on errands in the company of foreign drivers?“
He also wondered why recruitment was stopped from certain countries whose citizens had worked successfully in the Kingdom. He claimed the national committee for recruitment was determining the nationalities of those recruited, which had created further problems for citizens.
Al-Sultan further argued that it was a mistake to recruit from African countries. “We should not forget that the Saudi community went through some terrifying and frightening experiences at the hands of (people from) one African country,” he said.
Other Shoura members agreed with Al-Sultan on hiring from this African country. Nasser Al-Daoud said: “From my experience the workers from this particular country are involved in terrorist and criminal actions.”
Assaf Abu Thunain, head of the Shoura’s management and human resources committee, said: “Why is the country reconsidering recruitment from this country and allowing them to return to the Kingdom ...”
He said the Ministry of Interior has statistics showing the number of crimes committed by citizens of this country.


KSrelief delivers vital food aid in 6 countries

Updated 22 February 2026
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KSrelief delivers vital food aid in 6 countries

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s aid agency KSrelief distributed 131 food baskets to displaced and returning families in Rabak, White Nile state, Sudan, benefiting 865 people.

In Uzbekistan, the agency delivered 410 food baskets in Samarkand, reaching 1,547 people. The project aims to distribute 6,060 baskets of essential nutrition to 36,000 beneficiaries in 14 provinces.

KSrelief also provided 200 food baskets in Kamenica, Kosovo, benefiting 1,000 individuals as part of the Etaam project, which plans to deliver 8,017 baskets to 40,000 beneficiaries in 30 municipalities.

In Afghanistan, the agency distributed 110 cartons of dates to returnees from Pakistan and Iran at a refugee camp in Kabul province, assisting 660 people. This is part of a project to deliver 300 tonnes of dates to Afghans this year.

KSrelief distributed 765 cartons of dates to vulnerable groups in Moussoro, the capital of Barh El Gazel region in Chad, benefiting 4,590 individuals.

In Benin, the agency delivered 1,130 food baskets, reaching 6,780 people, as part of a project to distribute 7,825 baskets to 47,000 beneficiaries in several regions.