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Tourist visas to be introduced in KSA

Thank you for the great reply. I am pleasantly surprised, to be honest, but gratified too that Saudi Arabia is finally opening up its beautiful people, history and culture to the outside world. I can only wish you all a great success in this effort, and I look forward to visiting the country again, after a long time.

You are very welcome brother. It's about time that something happened on this front looking how many millions upon millions of tourists nearby, less attractive, less diverse and much smaller areas, receive. KSA is already the 15th most visited country on earth despite not having a "real" tourism sector but this is mostly (about half of that number) thanks to the Hajj and Umrah. I have no doubt that tourism will be a significant income sector in the future once what needs to be done will be done on this front.

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‘Only SCTA can announce KSA excavation findings’

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IMPORTANT DISCOVERY: A photo released by the SCTA on Monday shows
some of the stelae found in the Kingdom with Arabic inscriptions.​

Tuesday 5 August 2014

The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Development had no right to announce the result of excavations taking place in the Kingdom, the Saudi Commission for Tourism and Antiquities (SCTA) announced Monday.

“The SCTA is the sole authority to make such announcements,” said Ali bin Ibrahim Al-Ghabban, vice president of SCTA for antiquities and museums. He was referring to a French Ministry announcement on the discovery of the oldest Arabic inscriptions in the southern Saudi region of Najran. The findings were the result of excavations carried out by a Saudi-French joint archaeological team.

“This discovery and many other similar discoveries in the Kingdom’s northwest indicate the most ancient use of the Arabic alphabet,” he said.

“This discovery is in the advanced stages of scientific verification before being announced to the media by SCTA, according to the convention that regulates Saudi and international joint scientific missions,” Al-Ghabban said.

The SCTA is the only body authorized, on the basis of this international convention, to announce the archaeological discoveries after finalizing the scientific studies, he said, adding that it was a practice followed globally.

Al-Ghabban further disclosed that there are more than 30 joint scientific teams who carry out excavation work on several archaeological sites across the Kingdom in accordance with scientific administration protocols and under the full supervision of the SCTA.

He added that SCTA is the authorized entity to announce the scientifically verified discoveries, as it has been doing it over the past years. “We will announce the recent discovery about the emergence and evolution of the Arabic alphabet once the testing and scientific stages are completed.”

According to the French Ministry report, epigrapher Frédéric Imbert, a professor at the University of Aix-Marseille, found the Nabatean Arabic inscription about 100 km north of Najran near the Yemeni border. “The first thing that makes this find significant is that it is a mixed text, known as Nabatean Arabic, the first stage of Arabic writing,” he said. This script had previously only ever been seen north of Hejaz, in the Sinai and in the Levant.

The second is the fact that these inscriptions are dated. The period indicated corresponds to the years 469-470 AD. This is the oldest form of Arabic writing known to date, which represents the “missing link” between Nabatean and Arabic writing, said a spokesman from the ministry.

‘Only SCTA can announce KSA excavation findings’ | Arab News — Saudi Arabia News, Middle East News, Opinion, Economy and more.
Nabatean-Arabic missing link: ‘Oldest’ inscription found in Najran | Arab News — Saudi Arabia News, Middle East News, Opinion, Economy and more.

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Nabatean Arabic inscription​

french: http://www.yabiladi.com/articles/det...scription.html
french: http://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/fr/dos...ulturel-114654



"Islamic Graffiti at the beginning of Islam: new discoveries in Saudi Arabia."

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Islamic graffiti at the beginning of Islam, photography Frédéric Imbert
By Frederic Imbert

The study of thousands of graffiti in Saudi Arabia, hitherto neglected by researchers, we deliver a photograph of the Arab and Muslim society of early Islam completely new. Carved in stone, analyzed by mass, the High Islamic era graffiti written in Kufic called archaic characters have shed new light on the early history of Islam in the seventh-eighth century of the Christian era and first and second century of the Hegira that we knew only by relatively late and hagiographic texts.

Since the mid-1980s, Frédéric Imbert is interested in Islamic epigraphy. His research led him to Jordan, Egypt, Syria, Tunisia and graffiti from the dawn of Islam in Saudi Arabia in recent years. This is a true "Islam stones" from the title of one of his publications he reveals his knowledge of classical Arabic and history texts. Professor, he taught at the University of Aix-Marseille. This specialist in linguistics, languages and literatures of the Arab world and its markets is Director of the Department of Middle Eastern Studies at the IREMAM, the Institute for Research and Studies on the Arab and Muslim world.

Summary of its communication

Recent epigraphic surveys carried out in Saudi Arabia in November 2012 as part of the Oasis Arabian Mission (CNRS, UMR 8167) have revealed new Arabic texts dating from the first two centuries of the Hegira. It is essentially Islamic graffiti epigraphic mission gave order to identify and analyze. In a first exploration around the city of Najran (South Arabia, near the Yemeni border) our attention was particularly drawn by fifty graffiti collected on piles of rocks at a place called al-Murakkab . Systematic surveys have revealed the presence of a core of very ancient texts of which is dated 59 AH (678 AD). Curiously, it is associated with text representations engraved size men with arms raised in the said position of praying. Undoubtedly these human figures are contemporary epigraphic texts; above one of them, the name al Haytam-b. Bishr is engraved and is repeated in various other sites around Najran.

However, the most spectacular discovery on the site was a unique and autograph graffito 'Umar Ibn al-Khattab, a companion of the Prophet and the second Caliph of Islam, murdered 24/644. During a second exploration north Saudi, epigraphic mission noted 200 graffiti clustered on some cliffs near dumat al-Jandal. Three unpublished texts mentioning two caliphs and princes of the Umayyad dynasty (661-750) were discovered on this occasion. Recent fieldwork enable support the hypothesis of local shrines specifically dedicated to the etching of prayers and invocations whose formulas are repeated by hundreds and that we now call "walls pardons."

French:http://www.canalacademie.com/ida1034...-Saoudite.html


Graffiti and declarations of faith – Frédéric Imbert

Graffiti-Arabie-F.-Imbert1.jpeg

11/02/2013

Rock face covered with drawings and graffiti in kufi arabic from the Islamic period (Arabia 7th-8th centuries AD). The rock fell from the mountain and rolled down in the sand to finish… overturned. All the texts are therefore upside-down. Their content is mainly religious: calls for pardon and mercy, declaration of faith, of divine omnipotence (Photo F. Imbert, Mission Dûmat al-Jandal 2012). Prof. Frederic Imbert, a specialist of arab and islamic epigraphy, is taking part in the graffiti conference.

Graffiti and declarations of faith – Frédéric Imbert | Scribbling through History
 
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Some more photos of the the enormous countryside (mostly)

For Arabic speakers here and others (if they can navigate on that page) then I can highly recommend http://www.mekshat.com/vb/ when it comes to photos of the countryside of KSA etc.

By 2025 or something I hope to see KSA in the top 10 of the most visited countries list. Currently KSA is number 15.

For more photos on PDF see those two excellent threads below:

Saudi Arabia in Pictures | Page 77

The Arabian Peninsula and Arab world in photos

@Halimi @ebray @Belew_Kelew @IbnTaymiyyah @Syed.Ali.Haider
 
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Hi can someone explain why KSA only allowed people who hold passport with three names system (1st, middle & last name)

I'm very interested visiting KSA and I'm moslem
 
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Hi can someone explain why KSA only allowed people who hold passport with three names system (1st, middle & last name)

I'm very interested visiting KSA and I'm moslem

they like everything classic
 
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What do you means?

The way our naming convention works is that it is your name, followed by your father's name etc. and then it ends with the name of your family or clan or whatever. And because most people belong to a clan in Saudi Arabia and most clans have like 500,000 to 1M people who belong to them, you will have many many people with the same first and last name. So adding the name of one's father or middle name will reduce the confusion.

They like the heritage obsessed middle name , that's what i means

And this is why ladies and gentlemen why if you don't anything about a subject you should keep quiet.
 
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@Mosamania

What do you seriously expect from a Farsi?

May I also add that this is why you also often see double-legged surnames in KSA and elsewhere in the Arab world. All of this is bound in several millennium old traditions regarding lineage. I really don't think that there are any people out there who record ancestry as carefully as we Arabs and in particular Arabians do. Just in our neighboring non-Arab countries most people would struggle to tell who their great-great-great-grandfather was in 90% of all cases.

With ancient traditions you will always have a lot of traditions and sometimes this is positive and sometimes it is negative.

@Dante

If you are back home in Indonesia then visit the nearest Saudi Arabian embassy or consulate. There should be one in Jakarta. Given the fact that there are millions of Indonesians of Arab ancestry (mostly from the Arabian Peninsula) I know for a fact that they are busy almost every day due to visas, passports etc. Or try Canada.

Indonesia

Canada
 
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Kingdom’s tourism and hospitality sector to draw huge investments

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RIYADH: ABDUL HANNAN TAGO

Published — Tuesday 7 October 2014

Last update 6 October 2014 11:41 pm

Forecasts indicate the possibility of a dramatic growth in investments worth over SR95 billion in the Saudi tourism sector, hotels and apartments during the next 10 years.
While Saudi nationals spend billions abroad during holidays, incoming foreign tourists, including pilgrims, contribute heavily to the growth of commercial business in the Kingdom.
Amid continuous improvement in the hospitality and related sectors in Saudi Arabia that also excelled in providing first class services to its guests in term of health services, security and some other relevant hospitality services the travel industry look very promising, according to a an economist.
He said that the volume of investments in the Saudi Tourism and Travel Market (STTM) during the current year stood at SR150 billion, of which SR50 billion will be generated from domestic tourism, and SR100 billion from inbound tourism including pilgrims.
Domestic tourism alone has seen remarkable growth recently, where volume of spending has surged from SR59 billion in 2010 to SR103 billion in 2014.

The sector plays the role of a catalyst for economic growth and is one of the most prominent sustainable investment opportunities.
Haj and Umrah are also two of the most important sources of revenue for the Kingdom’s economy.
The number of pilgrims since the start of umrah season this year until Ramadan has already reached seven million.
This rapid growth came as a result of world-class infrastructure, which has created the largest investment opportunities for growth in the services sector for pilgrims and business visitors.
The same source says that by the year 2025 the number of pilgrims is expected to reach 5.2 million while in 2013 it had already touched two million.
This increase depends on the growing infrastructure works of Jeddah airport, which is expected to reach 80 million people by 2035.
The ongoing expansion of the Grand Mosque toward the north-west and north-east will increase its capacity to 2.5 million people, while the expansion of the Prophet's Mosque in Al-Madinah will boost its capacity from 600,000 to 1.6 million people upon completion in 2040.


Kingdom’s tourism and hospitality sector to draw huge investments | Arab News — Saudi Arabia News, Middle East News, Opinion, Economy and more.
 
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Will Non-Muslims such as Jews, Hindus be given these Visas?

Great now shut the door after you and remove the garbage that you left. Don't cry since your incredible hypocrisy on the issues that you raised was more than fittingly returned 1000 times over by me. Hence the silent reply. Try to have a civil discussion next time and learn some manners. Don't expect nice replies when you start throwing garbage around. Until then please keep out indeed.

Lastly you would wish to have as few problems as KSA. Problems that by large can be fixed in a relatively short period of time.

@Chinese-Dragon

Ignore my posts to that troll/individual. He clearly has some problems. Nobody cares though.

That's some of the landscapes of the Southern provinces of KSA. More precisely the Faifa mountains of Jazan province.

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KSA does not have a big rice production compared to China etc. and the one that exists is mainly found in the Eastern Province.;)

@Aeronaut could you please delete the latest off-topic posts? I have nothing against India or Indians but that troll started it and asked for it. Seen him do it before where I did not answer.

I lived in this area when I was a kid. My dad was working here and we stayed here for a few months. Back in the late 1980's. I still have fond memories of this place.

I think this is Abha correct?
 
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Will Non-Muslims such as Jews, Hindus be given these Visas?

Why should they not when KSA already hosts the biggest Hindu diaspora in the world or among the biggest and also hosts hundreds of thousands of Christians be it Westerners or Filipinos etc.? They won't be able to visit Makkah or Madinah though. Other than that why the hell not? Should we for instance prevent Christian Arabs from visiting or Jewish Arabs? There are already Western/Christian tourists in KSA anyway. They mostly visit beach resorts and tourist attractions but travel in groups. Of course they are only in the thousands due to the harsh visa rules. Initially the tourism sector in KSA will be targeted towards Muslims (my guess) but the goal is probably to attract people regardless of religion. I for once would not care what religion a visitor is. KSA is already home to migrants from all over the world and all continents. Of all colors and religions too.

That should answer your question unless you were trolling and not really interested in a serious reply.
 
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Why should they not when KSA already hosts the biggest Hindu diaspora in the world or among the biggest and also hosts hundreds of thousands of Christians be it Westerners or Filipinos etc.? They won't be able to visit Makkah or Madinah though. Other than that why the hell not? Should we for instance prevent Christian Arabs from visiting or Jewish Arabs? There are already Western/Christian tourists in KSA anyway. They mostly visit beach resorts and tourist attractions but travel in groups. Of course they are only in the thousands due to the harsh visa rules. Initially the tourism sector in KSA will be targeted towards Muslims (my guess) but the goal is probably to attract people regardless of religion. I for once would not care what religion a visitor is. KSA is already home to migrants from all over the world and all continents. Of all colors and religions too.

That should answer your question unless you were trolling and not really interested in a serious reply.

Jews from occupied Palestine will be barred but rest should be OK to come?
 
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Jews from occupied Palestine will be barred but rest should be OK to come?

Well, I think that you might be aware of the visa policies regarding the Arab world and Israel. As long as the conflict is ongoing Jewish Israelis will probably not be able to visit. They can stick to seeing us from Eilat in the Gulf of Aqaba.:lol: Joking aside, then no. I was also more referring to Jewish Arabs traveling with Arab passports into KSA or Jews living in the US or Europe etc. It was just to show him that I am not against KSA having visitors that have other religions than Islam. They might even be atheists for all I care. But it is a strange question to ask because KSA is already inhabited by people of all religions and Christians, Hindus or whoever can freely visit the country and they also do that for business, tourism, work.

When it comes to tourism everyone is welcome and Arabians have always been famed for their hospitality worldwide although this has somewhat diminished due to all the migrant workers and it not being anything "new" to see a stranger. But when they will get visitors from all over the world and those visitors actually visiting and exploring the huge country that is KSA and not just staying in their apartments in Riyadh, Jeddah or wherever they live this will change dramatically. The countryside in KSA is famous for its hospitality even among Saudi Arabians from the same region that travel from cities to villages/countryside. Let alone Saudi Arabians from provinces 1000 km's away. This is already what the tourists visiting KSA say. There are many interesting reports, documentaries even showing this. KSA has a lot to offer and it is a shame that this area has been wasted/not used at all.
 
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