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#3406 [Permalink] Posted on 15th December 2013 02:28
 
Thieves market in Makkah
demolished by development projects

14 December 2013

MAKKAH — The Souk Al-Haramiyyah (thieves’ market) in Makkah, which defied all attempts by the municipality to close it down, has finally succumbed to a development project. The open-air market will be annihilated under the construction work of the King Abdulaziz Project to develop the random areas. The souk is only half a kilometer away from the Grand Mosque.

The souk, which was called Goden Gooda (the long house) in an African language, is located in Al-Mansour district. It was also called the Friday market because it used to open only on Fridays, before it became an all week bazaar.

Later it came to be known as Souk Al-Haramiyyah because most of its goods, consisting of clothes, electric appliances, personal computers and other items, were stolen.

Baker Saleh, who only disclosed he was ‘African’, said the market is more than 16 years old. “It was called the Friday market because the vendors would sell their goods after the dawn prayer on this day. The market used to reach its peak after Friday prayers,” he said.

He said vendors would bring their products to the market on Thursday evenings and guard them until next day. “The selling and buying of the stolen goods became open about six years ago,” he said.

Turki Al-Faheem, a Saudi, said the items being sold in the market were simply unbelievable. “Knives, daggers, fire arms, herbal medicines, hallucination pills and sexual dysfunction drugs were on display,” he said.

He said the vendors had no fears of the police or the municipal inspectors. “After about 20 years of existence and defiance, the market had to finally give in to a development project,” he said.

Hussain Timbukti, a Saudi, said the products for sale in the market were a lot cheaper than those being sold in legitimate shops. “The market was flourishing before finally dying under a development project,” he said.

A spokesman for Makkah municipality said the municipality teams had many times confiscated the goods from the market, but each time the products would be replaced.

“We have confiscated tons of stolen products but the market continued to exist in complete defiance of our efforts,” he said.

http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index...20131214189483
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#3407 [Permalink] Posted on 15th December 2013 02:29
 
Masjid al Haram expansion progress

14 December 2013




Mataf expansion

14 December 2013 at 16:45












Temporary Mataf - Lower level

Now 3 parts




Haram North expansion

13 December 2013





 
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#3408 [Permalink] Posted on 15th December 2013 17:04
 
Makkah Clock Royal Tower, Fairmont Hotel

_____________________

Fairmont Residences: Designs
are inspired from Islamic heritage


The Fairmont Residences is part of the hotel’s services and directly
on the Holy Haram, where residents can enjoy breath-taking views of the Kaaba.

5 December 2013

Makkah Clock Royal Tower, Fairmont Hotel, a “novel index” in Saudi Arabia’s hospitality industry, has launched Fairmont Residences, which is operating diligently to welcome pilgrims with a boutique of features exclusive hospitality services adhering to the highest standards.

The Fairmont Residences is part of the hotel’s services and directly on the Holy Haram, where residents can enjoy breath-taking views of the Kaaba and the overwhelming sight of the most sacred place in the world, the Grand Mosque. These spacious residences range up to 160 sqm in size and are elegantly furnished with designs that are inspired from traditional Islamic heritage.

At Fairmont Residences, guests experience the most exquisite services and facilities that are designed keeping in mind the "elegant comfort" with 24 floors in the Makkah Clock Royal Tower-Fairmont hotel, offering four different categories of suites, that are the epitome of spirituality, tranquility, and comfort. One of the unique features of Fairmont Residences is the direct and dedicated elevators from the residence to the Haram. The exclusive entrance and reception area, which is specially tailored for Fairmont residence guests, enables easy free registration.

Adjacent to the outdoor praying area is a one of its kind Islamic Library accessible to only the guests of Fairmont Residences, and a reserved lounge that stretches either sides of prayer area.

Fairmont Residences consists of more than 660 units, and each entity has been masterfully laid out and shaped to reflect an atmosphere of comfort and peace of mind. The apartments have been equipped with all forms of facilities and amenities, such as spacious living and dining areas and private kitchens.

http://www.arabnews.com/news/487541















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#3409 [Permalink] Posted on 15th December 2013 17:07
 
Historic track comes to life
 
in “The Hejaz Railway”

photo: www.saudigazette.com.sa/myfiles/Images/2013/12/14/sg03_bi...
Hartmann 2.8.2 locomotive heading southwards across the desert between Dair Ali and Mismia.
Inset: James Nicholson signing his book ‘The Hejaz Railway’ after one of his talks in Jeddah.

15 December 2013

JEDDAH – Railways are not a common feature in the Saudi landscape. Recent projects including the Haramain Railway, the east-west and north-south lines and metro projects notwithstanding, the harsh conditions of the desert as well as the country’s vast size make railways not the optimum way of transportation in a time of budget airlines and motorways.

That makes the historic 1000-mile Hejaz Railway all the more intriguing. The railway, which ran between Damascus and Madinah, comes alive again in James Nicholson’s book ‘The Hejaz Railway’, originally published in 2005. Nicholson, who lives in Riyadh and works as an English language instructor for BAE Systems, recently visited the Hejaz twice to talk about his book and sell signed copies of it.

Speaking to the Saudi Gazette, Nicholson said the first real reason he decided to write the book came up following a trip to the Nabatean tombs at Mada’in Saleh, which lies along the old railway track, with his family and some friends. “The last afternoon, we had an afternoon free and my brother suggested going up the railway a bit off-road, and it was fantastic!” Apart from the spectacular mountain scenery, they witnessed “old stations still sitting in the desert as they were left in early 1920s” as well as “various bits of rolling stock lined by the side of the rail.

“I thought it was fantastic and obviously knew about the Lawrence story and a bit of the history,” so Nicholson decided that once he had returned to Riyadh he would buy a book on the subject. “I was amazed to find that there wasn’t one.”

Keen to fill this “gap in the market”, Nicholson approached a publisher in London. “They were happy to give me the go-ahead,” he related, admitting that while writing the book, it was “comforting to know it was going to be published”.

Ordered in 1900 by the last sultan of the Ottoman Empire, Abdulhamid II, and constructed in only 8 years, the nearly 1000-mile railway is an “extraordinary feat of engineering and endurance” that tragically lasted a short 6 years, until the First World War broke out in 1914. From that moment, the railway and its use became of strategic importance for the Arab revolt against the Turks, but the chunk that later became part of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has been abandoned ever since the end of the war.

“A lot of people realize the relevance of the Hejaz Railway” during the First World War, “but before that, it was a huge engineering achievement to build a 1500-kilometer railway in 8 years,” commented British Consul General Mohammed Shokat, who hosted one of the talks in Jeddah, indicating the apt timing of the talk at the consulate nearly 100 years after the start of the “Great War” and at a time of construction of numerous railways in the Kingdom.

The Hejaz Railway perhaps owes its fame to the British army officer T.E. Lawrence and the 1962 David Lean film ‘Lawrence of Arabia’, but, as James Nicholson writes in the preface of his book, “it is also the case that without the Hejaz Railway there may never have been a ‘Lawrence of Arabia’”, as it is “hard to imagine how his story could have developed in quite the same way had he been ambushing tanks or digging trenches in the sand”.

Nicholson, who was born in 1956 in Bournemouth and holds a Master’s Degree in Linguistics from Surrey University, spent 2 years researching and 1.5 years writing the book. “I was working full time at the same time, so it was done weekends and on holidays and evenings.”

Although the size and colorful photographs may give it the look of a coffee-table book, ‘The Hejaz Railway’ is in fact a thorough and precise account of the construction and running of the railway as well as its significance during the War. “There were two sides [to the research]: Going up the railway and looking at the stations and taking photographs” in Saudi Arabia, Syria and Jordan was one of them. In the Kingdom as well as the south of Jordan, following the railway meant checking maps, taking GPS readings and moving “down into 4-wheel drive”, heading out “across the wide broken bed of the desert valley”, Nicholson writes in his book. The rest of Jordan and Syria was done by car along the tarmac road and even partly by train, which until the recent troubles still ran between Amman and Damascus.

The other side was the research done in London at various universities and archives. Particularly useful was the correspondence between the British consul in Damascus, W. Richards, and Sir Nicolas O’Conor, the ambassador in Constantinople – present-day Istanbul. The British consul “wrote a sort of monthly report; the British were very suspicious, and they wanted to assure it was only a pilgrim line, not a military one, whether it was intended to bypass the Suez Canal” – which the British controlled – and “whether it was going to put pressure on Cairo and the route to India. That was a wealth of information,” Nicholson related.

Ironically, Richards initially did not even believe the Turks would construct such a long railway and “failed to report on a proposed scheme to build a railway line from Damascus to Makkah”, Nicholson writes in his introduction. Later, the consul justified his neglect in passing on the rumors that had been circulating in Damascus “by pointing out that the venture ‘seemed to me and others so wildly improbable, not to say fantastic, that I refrained from reporting on it to your Excellency’”.

The railway was indeed quite a ‘fantastic’ scheme: the harsh landscape consisting of volcanic rocks and vast stretches of sand as well as extreme temperatures and droughts made the project a challenging one.

Apart from the drift sand, a major challenge was the water. As the Western region of Saudi Arabia witnessed in recent years, it doesn’t rain much but when it rains it pours. “Wadis that remained dry for years at a time could become surging boulder-strewn torrents in a matter of hours when the rains finally fell,” Nicholson accurately points out.

It is at least remarkable that a fading empire, torn by economic and political evils and on the verge of bankruptcy, was able to carry out such a scheme. This can be partly explained by the almost complete absence of corruption as well as the promotion of the railway as an Islamic undertaking, aimed at facilitating the pilgrims travelling to the holy sites in Makkah and Madinah. A special fund was set up for people to contribute to the project, and nearly a third of the cost could be met by donations.

While the religious factor was important – the track reduced the hazardous 40-day journey to Madinah on camel, donkey, or even on feet to a safer and cheaper 4-day ride – it was not the only one. “It did have a military purpose: the Ottomans were trying to hold their power over the Hejaz and the holy cities,” Nicholson noted.

It also had an economic purpose. “There was quite a lot of trading, especially in the northern parts, in Damascus, and [the railway] had an outlet on the Red Sea at Haifa. There was quite a lot of agricultural export, so it had a financial side, but the main reason was a pilgrim railway.”

While Nicholson thinks it is unlikely the Hejaz Railway will ever be restored for use of pilgrims coming to Saudi Arabia, several stations – in Madinah, Tabuk and Mada’in Saleh – have been renovated by the Deputy Ministry for Antiquities and Museums for tourism purposes. Other stations and locomotives have been fenced off to prevent vandalism, but it is unclear if the authorities have any plans to restore them or build any amenities to promote tourism in the area. Until then, “the spectacular mountain scenery together with the old Ottoman’s stations and the occasional piece of abandoned rolling stock makes the railway an unbeatable off-road destination.”

http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index...20131214189476



Hejaz Railway Madinah historic importance view
as a trade and Hajj route


سكة حديد الحجاز شاهد تاريخي على أهمية المدينة المنورة كطريق للتجارة والحج (واس) 8/9/1434 هـ











 
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#3410 [Permalink] Posted on 15th December 2013 17:10
 
Umrah Season 1435/2014

__________________

Umrah season started on 1st Safar/4 Dec


14 December 2013





 
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#3411 [Permalink] Posted on 15th December 2013 17:11
 
Masjid al Haram

some years ago

 
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#3412 [Permalink] Posted on 16th December 2013 05:10
World Conference on Prophet Muhammad

___________________

World Conference on Dialogue and Its Role
in Defending Prophet Muhammad Concludes Meetings

Riyadh, Safar 9, 1435, Dec 12, 2013, SPA

The World Conference on Dialogue and Its Role in Defending Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) organized by Imam Muhammad bin Saud Islamic University has concluded its meetings here with the participation of more than 250 personalities from 51 countries.

The participants in the Conference have sent a cable of thanks to the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud for his approval and patronage of the conference , and thanked the Kingdom's leadership for supporting such conferences which provide examples of the efforts of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in the service of Muslims, their issues, and defending Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him).

http://www.spa.gov.sa/English/print.php?id=1178053



Rector of Imam Mohammed bin Saud university
receives the President of the Islamic Institution in Latin America

Riyadh, Safar 9, 1435, Dec 12, 2013, SPA

Rector of Imam Mohammed bin Saud Islamic university Dr. Sulaiman bin Abdullah Abal-Khail received at his office in Riyadh today the President of the Islamic Institution in Latin America Dr. Ahmed Ali Al-Sayfi.

During the meeting, Al-Sayfi, here to attend the conference on dialogue and its impact on the defense for Prophet Mohamed (pbuh), ways of enhancing cooperation between their two institutions were discussed.

http://www.spa.gov.sa/English/print.php?id=1178362



Malaysian official praises Saudi
moderation-supporting role

MADINAH, Safar 12, 1435, Dec 15, 2013, SPA

Adviser to the Prime Minister of Malaysia for Islamic Affairs Dr. Abdullah Mohammed Zain valued the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's efforts, led by the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, in bolstering the principle of moderation and the culture of tolerance and dialogue among followers of religions and cultures around the world in various fields based on the Holy Quran and the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him).

The Malaysian official's remarks came during a meeting with undersecretary of the Islamic University of Madinah for Development Dr. Mahmoud Qadah today.

http://www.spa.gov.sa/English/print.php?id=1178938
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#3413 [Permalink] Posted on 16th December 2013 05:12

 

Model of the new Haram expansion
and the new governmental palace on Mount Khandama


مجسم للتوسعة المستقبلية للحرم ويظهر فيها قصر الضيافة الجديد في جبل خندمة. توسعة_الحرم




Mount Khandama - 15 Sept 2013

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#3414 [Permalink] Posted on 16th December 2013 05:13
 
Makkah to issue new metro tender


Al-Mashaaer Al-Mugaddassah Metro Line - Mina
16 December 2013

JEDDAH – Saudi Arabia has decided to issue a new tender for the operation of the Makkah metro after canceling the first tender because of high costs submitted by bidding companies, an official has said.

Saud Bin Hamdan Al-Dhakiri, a spokesman for the Makkah development department, said 10 international firms had submitted bids in response to the first tender for a five-year operation of the metro, known as Al-Mashaaer Al-Mugaddassah Metro Line.

“We decided to re-tender the contract after we found that the bids submitted by those companies were costly. We have also stipulated that the company which is awarded this contract must raise the number of Saudi employees to 30 percent in the first years of the contract then to 80 percent in the remaining two years,” he told Okaz/Saudi Gazette.

He said the five-year contract for the present Chinese operator is about to expire and that the new operator must meet the “Saudization” terms.

Al-Dhakiri did not say when the second tender would be issued but added a committee grouping representatives from the ministries of finance and municipal affairs has been formed to review the contract and issue a new tender.

An international consortium led by China Railway Construction Corp in 2009 won the main contract for the construction of the Makkah train project, the first phase of which cost around SR25 billion (Dh24.5 billion). Saudi Arabia decided to build the train as part of a massive development project for Makkah and to transport more than three million pilgrims converging on the western city every year to perform pilgrimage.

http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index...20131216189649
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#3415 [Permalink] Posted on 16th December 2013 05:14
 
Over 300 projects in Makkah hit snags



http://www.flickr.com/photos/kmheer/10733188025/
December 16, 2013

Official study blames poor management and “courtesy” among government officials

More than 300 projects in construction and other sectors in the western Saudi town of Makkah have been blocked because of poor management, widespread courtesy among officials and other reasons, according to a government study.

The study was presented at a seminar held in the Western Saudi Rd Sea port of Jeddah at the weekend and reported by Okaz and other Arabic language papers on Sunday.

It showed there are 755 projects are under construction while 228 others have not been approved by the competent authorities. The study said 36 other projects are under tendering and 31 are being considered.

“The study pointed out that more than 300 projects in Makkah have either faltered or have been delayed,” Okaz daily said.

It quoted the study as saying the faltering ventures include six infrastructure and construction projects, two in transport, seven in the economic sector, 116 municipal projects, 103 in education and the rest in health and public works.

“The study cited nine reasons for the failure of those projects including lack of qualified engineers, absence of efficient management of projects and prevailing courtesy among officials,” the paper said without making clear how courtesy is affecting projects.

But it quoted the Makkah region undersecretary Abdul Aziz Al Khudairi as telling the seminar that there is a plan to save faltering projects in the city.

“We have drafted a 10-year plan to transform faltering projects to delayed projects as a first step to have them restarted and delivered on schedule,” he said.

The paper quoted other officials as saying a large part of the projects announced by the Saudi government over the past few years are based in Makkah given the huge value of such projects involving expansion of the Grand Mosque and Makkah Train.

http://www.emirates247.com/news/regi...12-16-1.531447
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#3416 [Permalink] Posted on 16th December 2013 11:35
From our very own SX4 who is actually there in Makkah.

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#3417 [Permalink] Posted on 16th December 2013 21:10

Minaret ConstructionUpdates
16 December 2013

By SX4

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#3418 [Permalink] Posted on 16th December 2013 21:12

 

Giant Minaret Construction Updates
16 December 2013
 
 
 
 

 
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#3419 [Permalink] Posted on 17th December 2013 06:23
 
Public Car Parking is Full
@ Sheba Amir, Gazzha Area






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#3420 [Permalink] Posted on 17th December 2013 06:27
Excavation Updates for
the largest Makkah Metro station
16-12-2013





















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