RIYADH, 13 March 2007 — Almutlaq’s Furniture, the sole dealer for the brands “Natuzzi”, “Gautier”, “Calligaris”, “Alf”, “La-z-boy” and “Warde” in Saudi Arabia, opened its new showroom on Olaya Thalatheen Street in the capital city yesterday. The move comes as Almutlaq’s Furniture seeks to address the increasing demand for its elegant furniture as well as offer its valued clients the newest designs of the Italian Natuzzi and French Gautier brands. The new showroom will also provide after-sales services, including delivery and installation.
The Belgium-based Energy Charter, a unique institution for the promotion of international cooperation in the energy sector, has planned to hold talks with the member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to negotiate their accession. Saudi Arabia and the five Gulf countries are not signatories to the Energy Charter Treaty, but they hold observer status of the Charter that provides a multilateral framework for energy cooperation on global level.
The three widows of the Frenchmen killed by unidentified gunmen on Monday, as well as two children of one of the women, returned to France yesterday, said Alain Guepratte, a spokesman of the French Embassy.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will arrive here tomorrow for talks with the Saudi leadership on a range of bilateral, regional and international issues. Iranian Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Mohammad Hosseini said that Ahmadinejad will mainly “discuss avenues for bolstering bilateral relations, the situation in the Middle East and the latest developments in the region and the world of Islam.”
RIYADH, 23 February 2007 — A major nationwide campaign to improve the socio-economic conditions of Indian Muslims in line with the recommendations made by the Sachar Committee will be launched in India on March 11. This fortnight-long campaign in the form of an “All India Caravan-e-Insaf (AICI)” (march for equality and justice) will pass through thousands of cities, towns and villages including 24 prime cities across India.
RIYADH, 16 February 2007 — Saudi Arabia and India are to set up a permanent panel to boost cooperation in sports and youth welfare sector. This joint committee is within the framework of the Saudi-Indo cooperation announced by Prince Sultan ibn Fahd, president of the General Presidency of Youth Welfare (GPYW) and Mani Shankar Aiyer, the visiting India’s minister of sports and youth affairs, here yesterday after their official talks.
Somnath Chatterjee, India’s Lok Sabha speaker, is an experienced parliamentarian who has spent 37 years as the people’s representative. Chatterjee’s name is now doing the rounds as the next occupant of India’s president house (Rashtrapati Bhavan). He may replace President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam as India’s first citizen when his current term ends in July. But Chatterjee refused to speak yesterday when asked whether he is a candidate for the highest job.
RIYADH, 2 February 2007 — The Saad Al-Sanea Center, a Saudi charity organization, announced yesterday that it would cover the cost of 60 kidney transplant operations on poor patients that will be performed at the 700-bed Saad Specialist Hospital (SSH) in the eastern city of Alkhobar. “The Saad hospital and the Saad charity organization, both owned by a Saudi philanthropist, are working on this humanitarian project,” said a hospital source. “The cases of kidney patients are first studied by a board at the charity before being referred to the hospital.”
RIYADH – Two prominent Arab professors from Egypt and Morocco, Mustafa A. Nasif and Muhammed A. Al-Omari, respectively, shared the 2007 King Faisal International Prize (KFIP) for Arabic Language and Literature, while two cancer experts from the US and Canada were declared co-winners of the prize for medicine.
Prince Muqrin, chief of General Intelligence, said yesterday that the Kingdom, as part of its SR3 billion e-government initiative, would lay down a full-fledged foundation for the system well before the target year of 2010. The initiative, dubbed Yesser (Arabic for “Simplify”), aims to make Saudi society more digitally literate and to streamline government bureaucracy.
