A national initiative to rehabilitate contaminated sites

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A national initiative to rehabilitate contaminated sites

A national initiative to rehabilitate contaminated sites
Every aspect of the environment will be meticulously examined to determine the best rehabilitation strategies. (Shutterstock)
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Saudi Arabia’s National Center for Environmental Compliance has embarked on a mission to rehabilitate contaminated air, soil and water across the Kingdom, setting a global example for environmental restoration.

This initiative is not just about technical processes and regulations — it is about safeguarding the future of Saudi Arabia’s natural resources and public health.

The center’s initiative, which is aligned with the Saudi Green Initiative and Vision 2030, involves extensive field surveys, data collection and laboratory analyses to identify and assess the extent of contamination at more than 320 polluted sites covering an area in excess of 12 million cubic meters.

From air and soil to groundwater, every aspect of the environment is meticulously examined to determine the best rehabilitation strategies.

For instance, the project begins with a detailed survey phase, where potential contamination is identified through desktop studies and field assessments.

The second phase involves rigorous field sampling and laboratory analyses, such as drilling groundwater wells to measure pollution levels.

Following these assessments, the National Center for Environmental Compliance develops targeted treatment and rehabilitation plans, ensuring that each site is restored to its natural state.

The initiative also involves estimating the costs of the damage caused by pollution and the expenses associated with rehabilitating the identified sites.

From air and soil to groundwater, every aspect of the environment is meticulously examined to determine the best rehabilitation strategies.

Saad Dahlawi

But this initiative is more than just a clean-up operation, it is a comprehensive approach that also involves monitoring and compliance.

Environmental monitoring plans, including inspections and the use of satellite imagery, are established to track and oversee rehabilitation and treatment efforts.

So far, 30 plans have been developed for the removal of pollutants and treatment of the most critical sites.

Polluters are also held accountable through stringent regulations, requiring them to work with licensed consultants to develop and implement site-specific rehabilitation plans and to handle and dispose of pollutants.

Once these plans are executed, the center ensures compliance through meticulous oversight, issuing closure certificates only when all standards are met.

This structured and multiphase approach is crucial for restoring the Kingdom’s natural resources and mitigating the impact of industrial pollution.

The initiative’s success is measured not just by the number of sites rehabilitated, but by the long-term sustainability of these efforts, ensuring that future generations inherit a cleaner, healthier environment.

Saudi Arabia’s National Center for Environmental Compliance is not only addressing the environmental challenges of today, it is also laying the groundwork for a sustainable future.

This initiative exemplifies the Kingdom’s commitment to environmental stewardship, aligning with global best practices and setting new standards in environmental compliance and rehabilitation.

Saad Dahlawi is the director general of the Environment Media Evaluation Department at the Saudi National Center for Environmental Compliance.

 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Former Saudi ambassador to US condemns Trump’s ‘mad ethnic cleansing plan’ for Gaza

Former Saudi ambassador to the US Prince Turki Al-Faisal speaks to CNN international anchor Christiane Amanpour. (Screenshot)
Former Saudi ambassador to the US Prince Turki Al-Faisal speaks to CNN international anchor Christiane Amanpour. (Screenshot)
Updated 2 min 36 sec ago
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Former Saudi ambassador to US condemns Trump’s ‘mad ethnic cleansing plan’ for Gaza

Former Saudi ambassador to the US Prince Turki Al-Faisal speaks to CNN international anchor Christiane Amanpour. (Screenshot)
  • Prince Turki Al-Faisal says Donald Trump’s plan to relocate Palestinians from the territory would lead to more bloodshed

LONDON: Donald Trump’s plan for the US to take control of Gaza and force Palestinians to leave would be “ethnic cleansing” that would spark conflict and bloodshed, Saudi Arabia’s former ambassador in Washington Prince Turki Al-Faisal said Wednesday.

In an interview with CNN, Prince Turki, who also served as the head of the Kingdom’s intelligence services, angrily rebutted the US president’s comments that included a threat of sending US troops to help turn Gaza into the “Riviera of the Middle East.”

He said he expected Arab and Muslim countries, along with European and other nations, to take up the issue at the United Nations to show that the world is opposed “this mad ethnic cleansing plan.”

“It is a fantasy to think that ethnic cleansing in the 21st Century can be condoned by a world community that stays on its behinds, and does not respond to that,” Prince Turki told presenter Christiane Amanpour. “The problem in Palestine is not the Palestinians. It is the Israeli occupation. And this has been clear and understood by everybody.”

Prince Turki said Trump’s comments upended previous US policy in favor of a two-state solution.

He said Trump’s plan was based on the position of Israeli extremist politician Itamar Ben-Gvir “the ultimate ethnic cleanser,” who recently resigned as Israel's national security minister over the Gaza ceasefire.

Trump’s words were “total acceptance of the Israeli position by the American government,” Prince Turki said, adding that this approach had been gaining support in US political circles over the past two years.

Prince Turki said that if Trump were to visit Saudi Arabia he expected him to receive “an earful” from the Saudi leadership about “not just the wisdom of what he is proposing, but the downright unfairness and injustice.”

Trump has had close relations with Saudi Arabia and made the Kingdom his first foreign visit of his first term. Prince Turki said Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had pledged last month to invest $600 billion in the US.
Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry strongly condemned threats to displace Palestinians from their land and reiterated the Kingdom's position that there would be no normalization of relations with Israel until the establishment of an independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.

“This has been the position of Saudi Arabia from the beginning,” Prince Turki said.

He said Trump’s Gaza plan on top of the “destruction and the devastation” of the territory during Israel’s campaign there would only lead to more support for militant groups like Hamas.

“Everybody has been telling the Israelis that if you repress these people, that if you punish them, if you inflict death and destruction and mayhem and genocide on them, all you are going to do is create more opposition,” Prince Turki said. “That’s why they want to use ethnic cleansing to get the people out of the territory.”

“So, their policy is clear cut and unfortunately, we hear this reflected now in what Mr.Trump has said.”


UN chief warns against ethnic cleansing, ‘demonization’ of Palestinians

 UN chief warns against ethnic cleansing, ‘demonization’ of Palestinians
Updated 10 min 24 sec ago
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UN chief warns against ethnic cleansing, ‘demonization’ of Palestinians

 UN chief warns against ethnic cleansing, ‘demonization’ of Palestinians
  • Antonio Guterres says Palestinians’ right to ‘live as human beings in their own land’ has been further eroded
  • Demands end to settler violence in the West Bank and for perpetrators to be held accountable

NEW YORK: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday issued a strongly worded warning against “any form of ethnic cleansing” of Palestinians, while also underscoring the importance of adhering “to the bedrock of international law.”

His comments came after US President Donald Trump’s announcement of a proposed takeover of Gaza under which the entire population of the enclave would be relocated to other countries.

“The US will take over the Gaza Strip,” Trump said in a White House press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“We’ll own it ... We have an opportunity to do something that could be phenomenal ... the Riviera of the Middle East.”

Trump added: “ We should go to other countries of interest with humanitarian hearts, and there are many of them that want to do this, and build various domains that will ultimately be occupied by the 1.8 million Palestinians living in Gaza, ending the death and destruction and, frankly, bad luck.”

However, the UN secretary-general warned that “in the search for solutions, we must not make the problem worse.”

Guterres said that it is “vital to stay true to the bedrock of international law (and) essential to avoid any form of ethnic cleansing.”

Speaking in New York at the opening of the 2025 session of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, he called for a renewed commitment to ensuring Palestinians can “simply live as human beings in their own land.”

He added: “We have seen the realization of those rights steadily slip farther out of reach.

“We have seen a chilling, systematic dehumanization and demonization of an entire people.”

The UN chief described “the catalogue of destruction and unspeakable horrors” as a result of 15 months of war on Gaza, in which nearly 50,000 people have been killed, 70 percent of them women and children.

He also condemned the destruction of civilian infrastructure, including hospitals, schools, and water facilities.

“The overwhelming majority of the entire population have faced displacement after displacement, hunger, and disease,” said Guterres.

“Children, out of school for over a year. A generation left homeless and traumatized.”

He said: “I welcome the ceasefire and hostage release deal. I thank the mediators — Egypt, Qatar, and the US — for the continued efforts to ensure implementation.

“Now is the time to be crystal clear about objectives going forward.”

While acknowledging the recent truce and freeing of captives held by Hamas, Guterres urged continued efforts for lasting peace.

“We must keep pushing for a permanent ceasefire and the release of all hostages without delay. We cannot go back to more death and destruction,” he said.

The UN is working tirelessly to provide humanitarian aid, he added, emphasizing the need for rapid, safe, and sustained access to those in need.

Guterres called for the international community to support the essential work of the UN Relief and Works Agency, which provides services to Palestinian refugees.

He reiterated the UN’s commitment to the two-state solution as the only viable path to a lasting peace.

“A viable, sovereign Palestinian state living side by side in peace and security with Israel is the only sustainable solution for Middle East stability,” he said.

The path to this solution, Guterres said, requires tangible, irreversible progress toward ending the occupation and establishing an independent Palestinian state with Gaza as an integral part.

The UN chief also expressed deep concern about rising violence in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, particularly acts of aggression by Israeli settlers.

“As affirmed by the International Court of Justice, Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territory must end,” said Guterres.

He called for a halt to the violence and for those responsible to be held accountable in accordance with international law.

Additionally, he emphasized the importance of preserving the unity and integrity of occupied Palestinian territory, including efforts to rebuild Gaza after its devastation.

“International law must be respected, and accountability ensured,” Guterres said.

He also stressed the importance of supporting the Palestinian Authority to foster unity and governance, which are essential for a viable future for Palestinians.

“We must work toward preserving the unity, contiguity, and integrity of the occupied Palestinian territory and the recovery and reconstruction of Gaza.

“A strong and unified Palestinian governance is crucial.

“The international community must support the Palestinian Authority to this end,” he said.


Egypt urges international community to back two-state solution after US Gaza plan

Egypt urges international community to back two-state solution after US Gaza plan
Updated 8 min 29 sec ago
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Egypt urges international community to back two-state solution after US Gaza plan

Egypt urges international community to back two-state solution after US Gaza plan
  • The statement by the Egyptian president's office made no direct mention of Trump's proposal

CAIRO: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi told his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday the international community must bear its responsibility to support the implementation of a two-state solution, according to a statement by the president's office.
The phone call comes after U.S. President Donald Trump said during a joint press conference with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday that the United States would take over Gaza after Palestinians were resettled elsewhere and develop it economically.
The statement by the Egyptian president's office made no direct mention of Trump's proposal and it was unclear if it was discussed with Macron.


Bangladeshi protesters storm and destroy a house linked to exiled former prime minister Hasina

Bangladeshi protesters storm and destroy a house linked to exiled former prime minister Hasina
Updated 28 min 42 sec ago
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Bangladeshi protesters storm and destroy a house linked to exiled former prime minister Hasina

Bangladeshi protesters storm and destroy a house linked to exiled former prime minister Hasina
  • Hasina’s Awami League in turn has accused the Yunus-led government of violating human rights and suppressing Bangladesh’s minority groups

DHAKA, Bangladesh: Thousands of protesters in Bangladesh took out their anger at exiled former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Wednesday by destroying a family home that came to symbolize the country’s independence — and now, they say, the authoritarianism they believe she led.
The attack was sparked by a speech Hasina planned to give to supporters from exile in neighboring India, where she fled last year during a deadly student-led uprising against her 15-year rule. Critics had accused her of suppressing dissent.
The house in the capital, Dhaka, had been home to Hasina’s late father and Bangladesh’s independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who declared the country’s formal break from Pakistan there in 1971. He was assassinated there in 1975. Hasina later turned the home into a museum.
Since she fled the country, some of her supporters have tried to gather there but have been attacked by Hasina’s critics, who have attacked other symbols of her government and party since the uprising, ransacking and setting fires in several buildings.
On Wednesday, some protesters threatened to “bulldoze” the building if the former prime minister went ahead with her speech, which marked the start of a month-long protest program by her Awami League political party. The party is trying to gain support amid allegations of attacks on its members and other Hasina backers.
As Hasina began speaking, protesters stormed the house and started dismantling the brick walls, later bringing a crane and an excavator to demolish the building.
“They do not have the power to destroy the country’s independence with bulldozers. They may destroy a building, but they won’t be able to erase the history,” Hasina said in response during her speech, even as the demolition continued.
She also called on the people of Bangladesh to resist the country’s new leaders and alleged that they took power by “unconstitutional” means.
Hasnat Abdullah, a student leader, had warned media outlets against Hasina’s speech and announced on Facebook that “tonight Bangladesh will be freed from the pilgrimage site of fascism.”
Many of the protesters chanted slogans demanding Hasina’s execution for hundreds of deaths during last year’s uprising against her. It was some of the country’s worst upheaval since independence. Hasina urged a UN investigation into the deaths.
They also chanted slogans criticizing India. An interim government in Bangladesh led by Nobel Peace laureate Muhammad Yunus has sought Hasina’s extradition but India has not responded.
The interim government, which has been struggling to maintain order and prevent mob justice against Hasina’s supporters, has accused the former prime minister of widespread corruption and human rights abuses during her rule that began in 2009.
Hasina’s Awami League in turn has accused the Yunus-led government of violating human rights and suppressing Bangladesh’s minority groups, which authorities have denied.


At least 40 children killed in Sudan over three days: UNICEF

At least 40 children killed in Sudan over three days: UNICEF
Updated 47 min 17 sec ago
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At least 40 children killed in Sudan over three days: UNICEF

At least 40 children killed in Sudan over three days: UNICEF
  • Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces have been locked in a fierce power struggle since April 2023, with the fighting intensifying this month as the army seeks to reclaim the capital

UNITED NATIONS, United States: At least 40 children were killed by bombings over three days in several parts of Sudan, a UNICEF official said Wednesday, calling it a “stark” example of the threats facing young people in the war-torn country.
“Sadly, it is rare that more than a few short days go past without new reports of children being killed and injured,” Annmarie Swai, the UN children agency’s representative in Sudan, said in a statement.
She referred to strikes in the southern city of Kadugli on Monday which killed 21 children and maimed 29 others, as well as reports of at least 11 children killed in the bombing of a livestock market in El-Fasher, the besieged capital of North Darfur state.
Eight more children were reportedly killed in a strike on a market near the Sudanese capital Khartoum on Saturday, Swai said.
“At least 40 children reportedly killed across just three days, in three separate areas of the country. This is a stark illustration of the devastating — and growing — threats to children in Sudan,” she said.
Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces have been locked in a fierce power struggle since April 2023, with the fighting intensifying this month as the army seeks to reclaim the capital.
Both have been repeatedly accused of targeting civilians and indiscriminately shelling residential areas.
Swai did not say which party was responsible for the deadly bombings on the 40 children.
The conflict has killed tens of thousands and uprooted more than 12 million people.
The United Nations has recorded more than 900 “grave violations” against children between June and December 2024 — mainly children killed or injured in Darfur, Khartoum and Al-Jazira states.
“Children in Sudan are paying the ultimate price of the relentless fighting,” Swai said, calling for all parties to respect international humanitarian law and to cease fighting.