Taif airport will ease pilgrim load at KAIA

April 10, 2013

Taif_airport

Taif , Apr 10: Taif airport may soon become a key disembarkation point for pilgrims coming in from the neighboring states.

The airport has seen a 250 percent jump in air traffic in 2012, according to Khalid Al-Khaibary, spokesperson and general manager of public relations at General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA).

The idea behind developing Taif as a major hub for international Haj and Umrah traffic is to ease the burden at Jeddah’s King Abdul Aziz International Airport (KAIA) during the peak seasons.

Taif airport accommodates Air Arabia, Saudia, nasair, Al-Masria, flydubai, Gulf Air, Nesma Airlines, Nile Air and Turkish Airlines. These airlines provide flights to Sharjah, Cairo, Dubai, Bahrain, Kuwait, Abha, Dammam, Riyadh and Istanbul.

Last June, Air Arabia began operating 66 flights a week from Taif to Sharjah.

Analysts are still speculating how much pilgrim traffic will pass through Taif this year, but aviation authorities are ready for the influx.

Taif airport opened in 1955 as a small domestic facility and remained under the radar until the GACA upgraded it to a regional hub.

GACA authorized a SR 8.8-million renovation of the passenger terminal and lounge, expanding it from 4,400 square meters to 5,600 square meters. The expansion allows the terminal to accommodate up to 600 passengers per hour. Passengers will pass through new customs and passport control areas. Annual passenger traffic will increase from 350,000 to 750,000, according to GACA.

The airport also has two runways with a capacity of 12,254 feet each. Although its capacity has expanded, aviation authorities have yet to establish air routes between Taif and Jeddah. It is also not connected to Madinah.

Al-Khaibary told Arab News that Taif’s airport is becoming the fastest developing airport among the Kingdom’s 23 domestic airports. He said 682,000 passengers used Taif airport in 2012 — 241,000 international and 441,000 domestic.

He noted that Taif received 1,900 international flights and 3,744 domestic flights in 2012. Al-Khaibary also said that since 2011, Taif airport has recorded significant growth in passenger traffic.

“In 2010, there was a total of 4,687 flights, then in 2011, the figure went up to 5,393 and reached 5,644 in 2012,” Al-Khaibary said.

Al-Khaibary also said that 779 international flights operated from Taif for first time in 2011 and carried 96,491 passengers. For 2012, that number skyrocketed 250 percent, with 241,000 international passengers.

“Taif airport has a 7-percent share in the total number of domestic passengers in the Kingdom,” Al-Khaibary said. “National and foreign airlines are operating 41 weekly flights to Egypt, Turkey, UAE and Kuwait.

Al-Khaibary added that GACA is negotiating with the Ministry of Haj to operate Haj charter flights to Taif.

GACA officials say they are encouraging airlines to operate more flights from Taif to other GCC countries to make it a true international hub.

Yet equally important are the efforts underway to establish specific routes from Taif to Makkah once pilgrims land at the airport. One route will lead to Makkah from Taif, Al-Shimaisi and Laith. Private cars and taxis will drop off pilgrims at the parking lot of Al-Shimaisi checkpoint, then pilgrims will take public transportation to the Grand Mosque.

Another route will take pilgrims from Al-Sail valley area in Taif via private car or taxi to Al-Sharaie residential district in Makkah. Pilgrims will then use public transportation to go to the Haram.

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News Network
February 24,2020

Dubai, Feb 24: Kuwait and Bahrain confirmed on Monday their first novel coronavirus cases, the countries' health ministries announced, adding all had come from Iran.

Kuwait reported three infections and Bahrain one in citizens who had returned home from the Islamic republic.

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News Network
March 18,2020

Riyadh, Mar 18: Private-sector businesses in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday were ordered to introduce enforced remote working for all employees for 15 days in an attempt to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Businesses that require staff to be physically present to ensure they continue to operate — including those in vital or sensitive sectors such as electricity, water and communications — must reduce the number of workers in their offices to the bare minimum. This can be no more than 40 percent of the total number of staff.

In such cases precautionary measures set by the Ministry of Health must be followed. At offices, and staff accommodation, with more than 50 workers, an area at the entrance must be provided where temperatures can be taken and symptoms checked.

Employers must also set up a mechanism for workers to report any symptoms, such as high temperature, coughing or shortness of breath, or contact they have had with infected individuals or people who recently returned from other countries without following proper Ministry of Health quarantine procedures.

Inside offices, a safe amount of space between employees must be maintained at all times. In addition, all health clubs and nurseries provided by employers must close.

Pregnant women and new mothers, people suffering from respiratory diseases, those with immune-system problems or chronic conditions, cancer patients and employees above the age of 55 are to be given 14 days compulsory paid leave, which will not be deducted from their annual entitlement.

Businesses that are excluded from the new measures include pharmacies and supermarkets, and their suppliers. Private-sector organizations that provide services to government agencies must contact them before suspending workplace attendance. Any other business that considers it impossible to operate with only 40 percent of staff in the workplace must submit an exemption request to the authority that supervises it.

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Agencies
July 8,2020

Jeddah, Jul 8: The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) writes to the members of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), urging the body to come in the way of a plan announced by Israel for annexation of significant portions of the occupied West Bank.

The letter was addressed by the 57-member organization’s Secretary-General Yousef al-Othaimeen to the UNSC’s members as well as the members of the Middle East Quartet — the European Union, Russia, United Nations, and United States— the Arabic-language Rai al-Youm news website reported on Tuesday.

The letter urged the Council to adopt “the necessary measures” that would prevent the annexation and compel Israel to stop all its illegal activities.

The OIC also urged the UNSC to hold an emergency meeting to “salvage the [remaining] opportunities for peace, and revive attempts at reinstatement of the political process under international supervision.” Such meeting, it added, had to enable realization of “the two-state solution, and [creation of] a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem [al-Quds] as its capital.”

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the plan to annex 30 percent of the occupied Palestinian territory — namely the areas upon which the regime has built its illegal settlements as well as the Jordan Valley — after US President Donald Trump backed the annexation in January.

Trump pledged the support while unveiling details of his Middle East scheme called the “deal of the century.”

The highly controversial scheme allegedly seeks to resolve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, but is heavily tilted in favor of the occupying regime. As well as backing the annexation, the scheme re-endorses Washington’s incendiary recognition in late 2017 of al-Quds as “Israel’s capital,” although Palestinians want the occupied holy city’s eastern part to serve as the capital of their future state.

Palestinians have roundly rejected either the American design or the Israeli plan that is rooted in it.

Tel Aviv had previously announced July 1 as the date it sought to start implementing the annexation plan. It, however, is yet to get it off the ground amid far-and-wide international condemnation and speculation that the plan was announced in the first place to deflect attention from a massive corruption scandal involving Netanyahu.

Countries warn Israel of consequences to bilateral ties

Also on Tuesday, Egypt, France, Germany, and Jordan warned Israel against going ahead with the plan, saying that doing so could have consequences for their bilateral relations with the Tel Aviv regime.

In a statement distributed by the German Foreign Ministry, the countries said their foreign ministers had discussed how to restart talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

Most other European countries have likewise communicated their objection to the plan.

“We concur that any annexation of Palestinian territories occupied in 1967 would be a violation of international law and imperil the foundations of the peace process,” the European and Middle Eastern foreign ministers said, referring to the year, when Israel occupied the West Bank.

“We would not recognize any changes to the 1967 borders that are not agreed by both parties in the conflict,” they added. “It could also have consequences for the relationship with Israel.”

Israel had no immediate response. In a separate statement, however, Netanyahu’s office communicated Tel Aviv’s intransigence on the matter.

The statement said the Israeli premier had told his British counterpart Boris Johnson on Monday that he was committed to Trump’s “realistic” plan.

“Israel is prepared to conduct negotiations on the basis of President Trump’s peace plan, which is both creative and realistic, and will not return to the failed formulas of the past,” the statement alleged.

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