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         Saudi Arabia History Regional:     more books (103)
  1. The Ottoman Gulf by Frederick F. Anscombe, 1997-04-15
  2. Al-Yamama in the Early Islamic Era by Abdullah Al Askar, 2002-08
  3. The Wells of Ibn Saud by VAN, D. van der Meulen, 2000-10-15
  4. Ottoman Rule in Damascus, 1708-1758 (Princeton Studies on the Near East) by Karl K. Barbir, 1980-05
  5. King Abdul-aziz & The Kuwait Conference by Moudi Mansour Abdul-Aziz, 2001-02-01
  6. The History of Al-Tabari, Vol. 6: Muhammad at Mecca (SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies)
  7. The Ottoman Gulf: The Creation of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar.(Review) (book reviews): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Virginia H. Aksan, 1998-12-01
  8. Saudi Arabia: Forces of Modernization by Bob Abdrabboh, 1984-12
  9. Records of Saudi Arabia 1961-1965 6 Volume Set
  10. Saudi Arabia (Meri Report, Middle East Research Institute, University of Pennsylvania) by Middle East Research Institute, 1985-04
  11. Records of Saudi Arabia 1966-1971 6 Volume Set
  12. Saudi Arabia: A Modern Reader by Winberg Chai Phd, 2005-05-01
  13. Inside the Kingdom: Kings, Clerics, Modernists, Terrorists, and the Struggle for Saudi Arabia by Robert Lacey, 2009-11-04
  14. From Arab Nationalism to OPEC:Eisenhower, King Sa'ud, and the Making of U.S.-Saudi Relations (Indiana Series in Middle East Studies) by Nathan J. Citino, 2002-07-31

61. Saudi
history A concise history of saudi arabia. News Weekly Arab political online magazine.Tourist information saudiOnline. General Resources, history, Culture,
http://www.albany.edu/history/middle-east/saudi.htm
Saudi Arabia
General Information Capital: Riyadh Population: 20,899,000 Land Area: 1,960,582 sqkm Per Capita GDP: $6910 Under 5 Mortality Rate: N/A Adult Literacy:N/A Fertility Rate: 4.9 Life Expectancy: 70.8(M); 74(F) Urbanization Rate: 95% Unemployment Rate: 40% (2000) Major Language: Arabic Major Religion: Islam Government Type: Monarchy * Data are from UNSD, UNICEF and CIA World Factbook Internet Resource Ministry of Information Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia in Washington D.C. A Country Study
Comprehensive information about Saudi Arabia, including the economy, history,
geography, culture, society, etc. CIA World Factbook
This site contains detailed information the country's population, economic situation,
political system, natural resources, etc. History
A concise history of Saudi Arabia.
News

Weekly Arab political online magazine.
Tourist information

Saudi-Online.
Other links
Provided by U of Texas. General Resources History Culture Society Religion ... Qatar Saudi Arabia Syria Turkey U.A.E.

62. Kuwait, Regional Delegation (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United
3005-1996 Annual Report 1995. Kuwait, regional delegation (Bahrain, Kuwait,Oman, Qatar, saudi arabia, United Arab Emirates). Activities for detainees.
http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList417/4F9307CAFCCCAB13C1256B660059
About the ICRC ICRC Activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Annual Report Annual Report Kuwait, regional delegation (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates) Activities for detainees
Tracing activities

Dissemination

Saudi Arabia

IN 1995 THE ICRC:
- visited 620 detainees in 17 places of detention in Kuwait, registering 208 for the first time;
- handled about 20,000 Red Cross messages and issued 288 certificates of detention and 144 travel documents.
Kuwait
Activities for detainees

ICRC delegates continued to visit places of detention holding people in connection with the Gulf war, and saw more than 600 detainees during the year. The majority of those visited were Iraqi, Jordanian, Yemeni and Sudanese nationals, Palestinians with only travel documents and stateless persons. Delegates had access to people held in detention facilities under the jurisdiction of the Ministries of the Interior (police stations, prisons and deportation centres), Defence and Social Affairs.
Through its private talks with detainees and its contacts with the authorities, the ICRC sought to ensure that people under deportation orders (non-Kuwaiti residents of the country and illegal immigrants) were not expelled to a country where they had reason to fear persecution, that they had the opportunity to settle their personal affairs and were allowed to take their belongings with them, and that they were not separated from their close relatives. During the year 160 protected persons were expelled along with their families. The closure of the border between Iraq and Kuwait in February 1995 meant that the number of those expelled directly to Iraq subsequently fell considerably.

63. Kuwait Regional Delegation (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United A
2905-1995 Annual Report 1994. Kuwait regional delegation (Bahrain,Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, saudi arabia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen).
http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList417/42D877901AF2E136C1256B660059
About the ICRC ICRC Activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Annual Report Annual Report Kuwait Regional delegation (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen) IN 1994 THE ICRC:
- visited 833 detainees in 29 places of detention in Kuwait, registeringg 296 for the first time;
- handled 22,500 Red Cross messages and issued 440 certificates of detention and 115 travel documemts.

Introduction
In order to carry out its humanitarian activities in connection with the conflict that broke out in Yemen in early May, the ICRC set up a delegation in the country see Yemen
KUWAIT SAUDI ARABIA BAHRAIN ... OMAN/QATAR/UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

KUWAIT
Activities for detainees

During the year ICRC delegates continued to monitor the conditions of detention and treatment of people held in connection with the Gulf war. The majority of those visited were Iraqi, Jordanian, Yemeni and Sudanese nationals, Palestinians with travel documents and stateless persons. The average number of detainees visited by the ICRC at the end of the year was 435. Delegates had access to people held in places of detention under the jurisdiction of the Ministries of the Interior (police stations, prisons and deportation centres), Defence and Social Affairs.
The ICRC ensured that people under deportation orders (non-Kuwaiti residents of the country and illegal immigrants) were not expelled to a country where they had reason to fear persecution, that they had the opportunity to settle their personal affairs and were allowed to take their belongings with them, and that they were not separated from their close relatives. During the year 83 deportees, along with their relatives, were accompanied to the border by ICRC delegates.

64. Saudi Arabia Resources
Cultural history. history of saudi arabia From ArabNet. General Information.Archaeology at About.com Middle East Index of Countries Homepage.
http://archaeology.about.com/library/atlas/blsaudiarabia.htm
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Saudi Arabia
Sites Universities Researchers Culture History ... Geography and Maps Archaeological Sites Jeddah
Discovering Jeddah, a travel article by Susana de Pint on her trip to Jeddah. University Programs Current Researchers Cultural History History of Saudi Arabia
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65. The Saudi Arabian Information Resource - Administrative Regions Of The Kingdom
and regional councils is clear evidence of the Kingdom's determination to increasethe involvement of the citizenry in the government of saudi arabia while
http://www.saudinf.com/main/a7.htm
var markerOn = new Image (18, 18) var markerOff = new Image (18, 18) markerOn.src = "../jpg/marker1.gif" markerOff.src = "../jpg/marker2.gif" NEWS ISSUES MAP GALLERY ... Statistical Tables Administrative Regions of the Kingdom For administrative purposes, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is divided into 13 regions. Below, we list the regions and the cities in which the administrative headquarters of each region are located. REGION and LOCATION OF REGIONAL HQ Each of these regions has a Regional Governor with the rank of Minister who is responsible to the Minister of the Interior . The structure of regional government and the composition of the regional governing bodies and regional councils is clear evidence of the Kingdom's determination to increase the involvement of the citizenry in the government of Saudi Arabia while maintaining stability and continuity.

66. 1Up Travel > History And Culture Of Saudi Arabia.
history arabia was probably the This still has a great effect on saudi society, especiallyon the position of women, who do not generally go out without
http://www.1uptravel.com/international/middleeast/saudi-arabia/history-culture.h

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Country Flag ... Travel Warning History Arabia was probably the original home of the Semites. Beginning in the 4th millennium BC, these ancient peoples moved into Mesopotamia and Palestine, where they came to be identified as Assyro-Babylonians, Canaanites, and Amorites. Culture Saudi culture is based on Islam and the perfection of the Arabic language. The Saudi form of Islam is conservative and fundamentalist, based on the 18th-century revivalist movement of the Najdi leader Shaikh Mohammed Ibn Abdel-Wahhab. This still has a great effect on Saudi society, especially on the position of women, who do not generally go out without being totally covered in black robes (abaya) and masks, although there are regional variations of dress. The Najd and other remote areas remain true to Wahhabi tradition, but throughout the country this way of life is being threatened by modernisation and rapid development.

67. Foreign Affairs - Book Review - A History Of Saudi Arabia - Madawi Al-Rasheed
A history of saudi arabia. Western studies available to offer this upto-date studyof saudi arabia. She brings out well the close saudi ties from earliest days
http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20030101fabook10275/madawi-al-rasheed/a-history-of
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A History of Saudi Arabia Madawi al-Rasheed. New York: Cambridge University Press, 255 pp. $55.00 (paper, $20.00)
Reviewed by L. Carl Brown Foreign Affairs January/February 2003
Topics:
Middle East

Afghanistan and the Future of Warfare

By Stephen Biddle
Foreign Affairs, March/April 2003
Israel Banks on a Fence

By Yuval Elizur
Foreign Affairs, March/April 2003 A Diplomatic Revolution: Algeria's Fight for Independence and the Origins of the Post-Cold War Era Matthew Connelly. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. American Orientalism: The United States and the Middle East since 1945 Douglas Little. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2002. The Road to Jerusalem: Glubb Pasha, Palestine and the Jews Benny Morris. London: I. B. Tauris, 2002. An anthropologist, Al-Rasheed has relied on the many Arabic and Western studies available to offer this up-to-date study of Saudi Arabia. Her account steers clear of both the overly heroic and the overly hostile. She brings out well the close Saudi ties from earliest days, first with the United Kingdom and then America. She treats Ibn Saud's matrimonial politics and what might be dubbed the "Arabian style" of leadership used by him and his successors while paying attention to the regional distinctions within Saudi Arabia and the situation of the Shi`a minority concentrated in the oil-producing eastern region. There is also a good description of the dynasty's religious extremists who were crushed in the 1920s (but whose ideological heirs thrive today), but she offers only a single reference to Osama bin Laden. A concluding chapter treats the writings, speeches, and celebrations that figure in the Saudi effort to create a favorable image and the counternarratives of Saudi dissidents.

68. Kuwait, Regional Delegation (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United
1Jun-1998 Annual Report 1997. Kuwait, regional delegation (Bahrain,Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, saudi arabia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen).
http://www.helpicrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList157/95FC231946124DDEC1256B66
About the ICRC ICRC Activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Annual Report Annual Report Kuwait, regional delegation (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen) The regional delegation focused its efforts on helping to ascertain the whereabouts and fate of persons reported missing in connection with the Gulf war [9] and visiting detainees in Bahrain. It also carried out dissemination and information activities in the Gulf region.
Various means were used to spread knowledge of humanitarian law and of the ICRC's mandate among target groups such as decision-makers, National Society staff, school pupils and the general public. The aim was to promote the ICRC's role as a neutral intermediary in situations of armed conflict and internal strife and as a significant player on the humanitarian scene.
A seminar and a workshop for officers of the armed and security forces were held in Kuwait and Yemen, respectively. Two similar courses were organized for the armed forces of Qatar.
The ICRC continued to develop contacts with the region's National Societies in order to promote understanding and acceptance of its work and proposed various forms of cooperation, especially in the field of dissemination. The Kuwait Red Crescent Society supported the ICRC's landmines campaign through a week of promotional activities in May and, as a result of a letter written by the National Society's President, the issue was debated in the National Assembly. Joint events for the 8 May celebrations also provided opportunities for such contacts.

69. SAUDI ARABIA
saudi arabia; factors affecting tourism in saudi arabia. activities in saudia arabia;computer technology planting, design and landscape architectural history.
http://www.eastman.org/3_histhse/ifla/saudiarabia.html
SAUDI ARABIA KING FAISAL UNIVERSITY Degree Granted: Bachelor of Landscape Architecture (BLA) Current Program Enrollment: Address: Contact: Year Initiated: Number of degrees awarded to date: Average number of graduates yearly (past three years): CELA affiliated: No Admission requirements: C+ average in first year of university Application deadline: February Application fee: None Curriculum: Prepare students with skills necessary to enter the professional field of landscape architecture; to foster an understanding of the human/nature relationships and use of these skills in planning and designing quality environments. Areas of specialization available: Urban landscape design; regional landscape planning and design. Graduation requirements: 165 units with a GPA not less than a D Typical length of program: 5 years Special facilities: Computer lab In-state or citizen: N/A Financial aid available: Government provides free education to those accepted into the university Faculty: Full-time faculty asssigned to program: Part-time faculty assigned to program: International exchange programs: Work Internships: Special Comments: There is interest in developing student internship and faculty exchanges.

70. ICL - Saudi Arabia Index
history and News 25 June 1996 A bomb attack kills 19 US soldiers at 28 June 1995,Dubai, Katar saudi arabia's King Fahd acknowledges Katar's new emir, Sheik
http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/sa__indx.html
Saudi Arabia Index Constitutional Background
Constitutional reforms - after having been promised since the era of King Feisal - were implemented by King Fahd in 1992. The resulting Constitutional Government is radically different from Western style social order. Article of the Basic Law of Government stipulates that "God's Book and the Sunnah" are the substantive constitution of Saudi Arabia, being only amended (not changed) by reforms of state organization. Saudi Arabian monarchy is religion bound . Furthermore, the new Consultative Council (Shura Council, Majlis al-Shura) is subject to nomination and re-nomation by the king, not to election by the people. Speeches in the 11,000 mosques are pre-censored by administrative officials, women are not allowed to acquire driving licenses. In 1995, more than 150 delinquents were put to death by being publicly beheaded with a sword; thiefs are punished by cutting off their hand. Islamists openly challenge the Saud dynasty with its 6000 Princes for decadent and corrupt lifestyle. The King submits two of the five secret services directly to his command. Possible successors of the very sick monarch are the Princes Naif Sultan , and Bandar . An option for a non-dynastic government could be Ahmed Saki el-Jamani , a former oil minister now businessman in London.

71. ZUJI
history, Parts of what is now eastern saudi arabia were first settled in thefourth or fifth millenium BC by migrants from what is now southern Iraq.
http://www.zuji.com.au/dest/guide/0,1277,ZUJIAU|3023|2727|1,00.html
About ZUJI Travel Resource Links Travel Resources Home Research a Destination Convert Currency Check Weather Check Visa Requirements Buy Travel Insurance Flight Arrival/Departure Info Book a Flight Find a Hotel Hire a Car Log-in Log-out Become a Member Site Map Travel Resources Home Destination Guides Travel Tools
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... Middle East : Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
History Parts of what is now eastern Saudi Arabia were first settled in the fourth or fifth millenium BC by migrants from what is now southern Iraq. The Nabateans had the biggest of the early empires, stretching as far as Damascus around the first century BC. In the early 18th century the Al-Saud, the ruling family of modern Saudi Arabia, were the ruling shaikhs of the oasis village of Dir'aiyah, near modern Riyadh. When they formed an alliance, in the mid-18th century, with Mohammed bin Abdul Wahhab, the result was Wahhabism, the back-to-basics religious movement which is still Saudi Arabia's official form of Islam. By 1806, the converting armies of Wahhabism had conquered most of modern Saudi Arabia as well as a large part of southern Iraq. None of this went down well in Constantinople, as western Arabia was, at least in theory, part of the Ottoman Empire. In 1812 the empire retook western Arabia, and by the end of the 19th century the Al-Saud had retreated to Kuwait, where they were given sanctuary. From here one of the great Al-Saud leaders, known as Ibn Saud, brewed up an irresistible combination of piety, strategy and diplomacy and retook Riyadh and then, in 1925, Jeddah.

72. ReliefWeb: Saudi%20Arabia The Latest
Reuters, Iraqi men despair at saudi refugee camp, DR Congo/Burundi, Côte d'Ivoire,Colombia, saudia arabia, USAID assistance to the West African regional program,
http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/vCD/Saudi Arabia?OpenDocument&StartKey=Saudi

73. Washington Institute Publications On Saudia Arabia And The
Arab–Israeli relations are in crisis, regional radicals are buoyant Examines thehistory of the religious establishment in saudi arabia from the
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/pubs/pubspg/saudgulf.htm

74. Update: Outbreak Of Rift Valley Fever --- Saudi Arabia, August--November 2000
143 casepatients reported a history of exposure Medicine, A Raheem Ageel, MSD, RegionalHealth Affairs Rabeah, N Al Hamdan, MD, saudi arabia Field Epidemiology
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4943a3.htm
Update: Outbreak of Rift Valley Fever - Saudi Arabia, AugustNovember 2000
On September 10, 2000, the Ministry of Health (MOH), Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and subsequently, the MOH of Yemen began receiving reports of unexplained hemorrhagic fever in humans and associated animal deaths and abortions from the far western Saudi-Yemeni border region. These cases subsequently were confirmed as Rift Valley fever (RVF), the first such cases on the Arabian peninsula ( ). This report updates the findings of the ongoing investigation conducted by the Saudi Arabian MOH in collaboration with CDC and the National Institute of Virology, South Africa. As of November 1 in Saudi Arabia, 516 persons with suspected severe RVF* requiring hospitalization have been reported from primary health-care centers and hospitals ( Figure 1 Based on preliminary data from the ongoing epidemiologic investigation, 125 (76%) of 165 case-patients reported close contact with animals, especially sheep and goats, and 91 (64%) of 143 case-patients reported a history of exposure to dead, and/or aborted animals. Nearly all persons reported having had mosquito bites and that the mosquitoes were present at their place of residence. Entomologic studies found large numbers of two species of mosquitoes

75. Lonely Planet World Guide | Destination Saudi Arabia | Off The Beaten Track
AlSoudah, near the summit of saudi arabia's highest mountain - the 2910m (9544ft in1987, and includes restored rooms and exhibits of regional handicrafts and
http://www.lonelyplanet.com/destinations/middle_east/saudi_arabia/obt.htm
home search help worldguide ... Related Weblinks
Saudi Arabia
Off the Beaten Track
Madain Salah
This windswept plain in the far north-west of the country is one of the most compelling places in Saudi Arabia, and the spectacular rock tombs here are the kingdom's most famous archeological site. Most of them were carved between 100 BC and 100 AD, when Madain Salah was the second most important Nabatean kingdom after Petra (now in Jordan). The tombs were 'discovered' in the 1880s by Charles Doughty - you can read all about it in his Travels in Arabia Deserta Although Madain Salah's tombs are less spectacular than those at Petra, they're much better preserved - the rock here is harder and less prone to water damage. Be sure to see Qasr Farid , the largest tomb at Madain Salah. It is carved from a single large outcrop of rock standing alone in the desert. The Diwan , or meeting room, is carved into a hillside and would probably have been used as a cult site. Qasr al-Bint , the Girl's Palace (yes, that's where the word comes from), is a whole group of tombs carved into an outcrop of rock. You really need a vehicle to get around Madain Salah, as the distances are large and the heat extreme. You might want to take an organised tour, as it's pretty difficult to get to the site - these go from both Medina and Riyadh. If you want to get there off your own bat, it's about 330km (205mi) north of Medina - many of the roads aren't signposted.

76. Arabic News Front Page For 6/19/1998
regional, history, 6/19/1998 More news from today. Go A delegation representing saudiArabia at a meeting of the Yemeni saudi legal committee arrived in Sanaa
http://www.arabicnews.com/ansub/Daily/Day/980619/FP.html

77. Policy Brief
This history of wmd attacks on Iran by Iraq (and even The View from Tehran OtherRegional Considerations. the Gulf, to the Southwest of Iran, saudi arabia is a
http://www.mideasti.org/html/b-purcell09082002.html
Congressional Policy Brief #6
The Atlantic Council of the United States, The Middle East Institute,The Middle East Policy Council, and The Stanley Foundation U.S. Challenges and Choices in the Gulf:
Iran and Proliferation Concerns
This policy brief is based on the discussion at the eighth in a jointly sponsored series of congressional staff briefings on “U.S. Challenges and Choices in the Gulf.” To receive information on future briefings, contact Jennifer Davies at jdavies@stanleyfoundation.org. I. The Proliferation Picture in the Gulf: A Tough Neighborhood The Gulf region is beset by historical rivalries, competition for regional influence, territorial disputes and explosive conflicts. These factors create a dangerous strategic environment in which many key regional actors look to defend their national interests by pursuing weapons of mass destruction (wmd) and ballistic missiles. This regional attraction to wmd poses serious problems for U.S. policymakers. It represents a clear and present danger to U.S. interests, troops and allies in a region with vital oil and gas deposits, a pivotal geographic location and a volatile recent history.

78. Conservation Of North Eastern Red Sea
Secretary General of NCWCD launched the opening of the regional Workshop on remarks,Mr.Kuniaki NAGATA Resident Representative of JICA in saudi arabia, and Mr
http://www.jica.go.jp/saudiarabia/RedSeaSeminar.htm
JICA Saudi Arabia Office Welcome Speech Activities in KSA What is New History of Coop. ... Contact Us
REGIONAL WORKSHOP ON
CONSERVATION OF THE NORTH EASTERN
RED SEA
(28 ~ 30 JANUARY 2002)
H.E. Mr.Nobuyasu ABE, the Ambassador of Japan to the Kingdom and H.E. Professor Dr.Abdulaziz Abuzinada the Secretary General of NCWCD launched the opening of the "Regional Workshop on Conservation of the Northern Red Sea" on Monday 28th of January, at Hyatt Regency Hotel in Riyadh. Following their remarks, Mr.Kuniaki NAGATA Resident Representative of JICA in Saudi Arabia, and Mr.Omar Khushaim the Director of Marine Department of NCWCD delivered their remarks highlighting some background of the Workshop and the JICA-NCWCD cooperation for the Red Sea environment conservation. HE Mr. Nobuyasu ABE, Ambassador of Japan and HE Orof. Dr. Abdulaziz Abu Zinada, Secretary General of NCWCD launch the opening of the workshop with the presence of Mr. Kuniaki NAGATA, JICA Resident Rep. and Mr. Omer Khushaim Director General of Marine Dept.

79. What Is New
in Northern Part of the Red Sea of Kingdom of saudi arabia , which jointly Development(NCWCD), both JICA and NCWCD will jointly host the regional Workshop on
http://www.jica.go.jp/saudiarabia/Whatisnew.htm
JICA Saudi Arabia Office Welcome Speech Activities in KSA What is New History of Coop. ... Contact Us
NEW ACTIVITIES
Since the establishment of JICA in KSA, JICA does not over look to respond to the urgent needs and necessary issues in the Kingdom based on the priority areas. To review the latest projects and events please click on one of the following links: Saudi Japanese Automobile High Institute Project in Jeddah (SJAHI) HE Dr. Ali Al-Ghafis, Governor of GOTEVT and Mr. OTSU, Head of JICA Implementation Study Mission signing the inaguration of SJAHI Project Underwater Photos taken during the Study of Northern Red Sea in KSA Regional Workshop on Conservation of the North Eastern Red Sea Due to the fact that multilateral cooperation is indispensable for the promotion of nature conservation in the Red Sea area, and in accordance with the valuable results of the Development Study for "Coastal/Marine Habitat & Biological Inventories in Northern Part of the Red Sea of Kingdom of Saudi Arabia", which jointly conducted between the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the National Commission for Wildlife Conservation and Development (NCWCD), both JICA and NCWCD will jointly host the Regional Workshop on Conservation of the North Eastern Red Sea.

80. Remarks By Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama During His Visit To The Middle East
taken me to the Kingdom of saudi arabia, the Arab assist this great current of historytowards the negotiations and aim to promote regional cooperation, given
http://www.mofa.go.jp/announce/press/pm/murayama/m_east.html
Remarks by Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama During His Visit to the Middle East
September 18, 1995 On 12 September, I began a series of visits which has taken me to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the Arab Republic of Egypt, the Syrian Arab Republic, the State of Israel and the Gaza Strip, and today I arrived here in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, my final stop. I should first of all like to express my gratitude for the warm welcome which I received in each of these locations. It has been deeply moving for me that I have been able to visit this Middle East region during this year marking the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II. Today, Japan is determined to move forward by making an international contribution commensurate with its political and economic standing in order to realize a better future for all humanity. In the Middle East as well, I have continued to renew my recognition that the peace and prosperity of this region is in the interest of the entire international community, which of course includes Japan; and, believing that it is our primary role to help create a new system of international relations, I came to this region to speak directly to the Heads of State and Government here and to explain the specifics of the contribution which Japan has made and will make in the future. During this visit, I emphasized, first, that Japan was prepared to make a positive and constructive contribution for the peace, stability and prosperity of the Middle East.

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