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  • Saudi Society
    In Saudi Coffeehouses, a Window Into a Changing Society

    “I think the reason coffee shops became a trend is because people are more open to change,” said Shaden Alkhalifah, 30, who was studying at Draft Café in Riyadh on a recent evening. “It has something to do with the current political dialogue,” she added. (And, perhaps, with the many Saudis who have studied abroad in cities with single-origin coffee bean fetishes.)

  • Energy
    Saudi Aramco Chairman: Oil Industry Should Think In Decades

    Energy transitions “take decades, even centuries” to complete, the chairman of the world’s largest oil company, Saudi Aramco, said at a conference on Monday, adding that the industry should continue to think in decades. Because complete energy transformations take such a long time to complete, the oil industry should continue to think in decades, Aramco’s chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan said at the International Petroleum Technology Conference (IPTC) in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, as carried by Al Arabiya English.

  • Horse Racing
    Saudi Cup, world’s richest horse race, attracts stellar field

    Shortly after the Jockey Club of Saudi Arabia announced the creation of the Saudi Cup as the world's richest horse race, American trainer Bob Baffert mused, "If you put up $20 million, you'll get good horses in your starting gate."

  • Syria
    Syrian army urges civilians to leave last rebel enclave; Russia offers 3 ways out

    Backed by Russian jets, Syrian forces had pounded towns in the northwestern rebel bastion in recent weeks, displacing hundreds of thousands of people. At least 300,000 civilians have fled their homes since mid-December, the United Nations estimated last week.

  • Libya
    Libya’s Haftar left Moscow without signing ceasefire deal

    Haftar asked for a delay until Tuesday to consider signing, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told a news conference on Monday. Hours later, however, Haftar and his entourage left Moscow without agreeing the deal.

  • U.S. Congress
    Senate vote to limit Trump’s military actions against Iran in limbo

    The Senate vote on halting military action against Iran is up in the air, with the upcoming impeachment trial and Tuesday’s presidential debate scrambling the timing for floor action.

  • Global Debt
    Global debt rockets toward potentially destabilizing record high

    Developed countries, known as mature markets, are now burdened with a total of $180 trillion in debt, or 383% of their combined GDP, Reuters said. Emerging-market countries’ debt has doubled since 2010 to hit $72 trillion, driven mainly by a $20 trillion increase in corporate debt, Reuters said.

  • Healthcare IPO
    Saudi Healthcare Firm Said to Start IPO in Wake of Aramco Sale

    Dr. Sulaiman Al Habib Medical initially planned to sell shares in 2016, people familiar with the matter said at the time. The company operates at least 14 medical facilities across Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, according to its website.

  • Syria
    For these Syrian artists, humor is essential to coping with oppression and war

    There is an Arabic proverb that says the worst tragedies are the ones that make you laugh. Alzakout is part of a flourishing community of Syrian artists in exile who are testing that notion. After eight years of conflict in Syria, at least half a million people have been killed and about 11 million have been forced to flee their homes. The war has devastated the country’s infrastructure and economy, plunging 80 percent of the population into poverty.

  • Qasem Soleimani
    Trump authorized Soleimani’s killing 7 months ago, with conditions

    "There have been a number of options presented to the president over the course of time," a senior administration official said, adding that it was "some time ago" that the president's aides put assassinating Soleimani on the list of potential responses to Iranian aggression.