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| Saudi Arabia | Plants and Animal | Back to Top |
For a nation largely composed of desert, Saudi Arabia has fairly valuable biovariety. Eighteen % of its invertebrate animals, seven of its nine amphibians, and all of its indigenous freshwater fish are found nowhere else. There are an around 3,500 species of plants and 59 terrestrial mammals, 19 of which are endangered, vulnerable, or rare. Government-sponsored wildlife teams are working to increase populations of threatened houbara bustards and Arabian oryx. In addition, there are 413 recorded species of birds, 11 of which are rare or endangered.
| Saudi Arabia | Communications | Back to Top |
1998, the government contracted for the installation of 575,000 additional Group Speciale Mobile (GSM) cellular telephone lines over 15 months to raise the total number of subscribers to more than one million; Riyadh planned to further expand the GSM system in 1999 by adding an additional one million lines (1998)
Telephone system: general assessment: modern system
domestic: considerable microwave radio relay, coaxial cable, and fiber-optic cable systems
international: microwave radio relay to Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, UAE, Yemen, and Sudan; coaxial cable to Kuwait and Jordan; submarine cable to Djibouti, Egypt and Bahrain; satellite earth stations - 5 Intelsat (3 Atlantic Ocean and 2 Indian Ocean), 1 Arabsat, and 1 Inmarsat (Indian Ocean region)
| Saudi Arabia | Culture | Back to Top |
Saudi Arabia in the 1990s was a society of contrasts. After three decades of intense modernization, the nation's urban infrastructure was highly developed and technologically sophisticated. Excellent hospitals, clinics, schools, colleges, and universities offered free medical care and education to Saudi citizens. Shopping malls displayed Paris fashions; supermarkets sold vegetables flown in from the Netherlands; restaurants offered Tex-Mex, Chinese, or haute cuisine; and amusement centers with separate hours for male and female patrons dotted the urban landscape. Suburban neighborhoods with single-family houses and swimming pools hidden behind high walls ringed commercial districts, and satellite communications made a telephone call from Riyadh to New York as fast and as clear as a call to New York from Connecticut.
Politically, the early 1990s saw unprecedented expressions of political dissidence born of the economic imbalances and shifting social boundaries produced by the development process. In petitions to the king for reform in the political system and political sermons in the mosques, Saudis have sought representation in government decision making. They have begun to ask who should control the fruits of oil production, who should decide the allocation of resources, and whose version of the just society should be rendered into law? But among opposition voices there was another contrast: some demanded representation to ensure that the governing system would enforce sharia -Islamic law, whereas others demanded representation to ensure protection for the individual from arbitrary religious or political judgments.
The Persian Gulf War of 1991 has exacerbated these contrasts: as Saudi Arabia becomes more dependent on the United States militarily, the need to assert cultural freedom from the West becomes proportionately greater. As Saudi Arabia abandons orthodox alliances in the Arab world in favor of closer ties with the West, the need to assert its leadership as a Muslim nation among the Muslim nations of the world becomes greater. In the early 1990s, tradition and Westernization coexisted in uneasy balance in Saudi Arabian society.
| Saudi Arabia | Defence | Back to Top |
Military branches: Land Force (Army), Navy, Air Force, Air Defense Force, National Guard, Ministry of Interior Forces (paramilitary)
Military manpower - military age: 17 years of age
Military manpower - availability: males age 15-49: 5,894,691 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - fit for military service: males age 15-49: 3,291,185 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - reaching military age annually: males: 233,402 (2001 est.)
| Saudi Arabia | International Disputes | Back to Top |
a final border resolution was agreed to with Qatar in March of 2001; location and status of boundary with UAE is not final, de facto boundary reflects a 1974 agreement; a June 2000 treaty delimited the boundary with Yemen, but final demarcation requires adjustments based on tribal considerations
| Saudi Arabia | Economy | Back to Top |
Agriculture and farm animal raising have historically been the basic economic activities of Saudi Arabia, but since the development of the oil industry, the government has sought to diversify its industrial base and improve its basic economic structure, developing roads, airports, seaports, and the power industry. Through a sharp increase in oil prices beginning in 1973, Saudi Arabia began to amass a tremendous cash reserve. The government used its newfound wealth to transform its economy at a rate almost without precedent in modern history. A deficiency of trained and skilled labor was partially offset by millions of guest workers. By the mid-1980s, oil prices were in decline as a system of production quotas created by oil-exporting nations began to break down.
Oil deposits are located in the east, southward from Iraq and Kuwait into the Rub' al-Khali and under the waters of the Persian Gulf. Other mineral resources are known to exist, and the government has pursued a policy of exploration and production in order to diversify the economic base. Geologic reconnaissance mapping of the Precambrian shield in the west has revealed deposits of gold, silver, copper, zinc, lead, iron, titanium, pyrite, magnesite, platinum, and cadmium. There are also nonmetallic resources such as limestone, silica, gypsum, and phosphorite. Forest and rangeland resources are limited, the former covering a total of only about 600 square miles, mostly in Asir.
This is an oil-based economy with strong government controls over major economic activities. Saudi Arabia has the largest reserves of petroleum in the world,ranks as the largest exporter of petroleum, and plays a leading role in OPEC. The petroleum area accounts for roughly 75% of budget revenues, 40% of GDP, and 90% of export earnings. About 35% of GDP comes from the private sector. Roughly 5 million foreign workers play an valuable role in the Saudi economy, for example, in the oil and service sectors. Saudi Arabia was a key player in the successful efforts of OPEC and other oil producing countries to raise the price of oil in 1999-2000 to its highest level since the Gulf war by reducing production. Riyadh expects to have a moderate budget deficit in 2001, in part because of increased spending for education and other social programs. The government in 1999 announced plans to begin privatizing the electricity companies, which follows the ongoing privatization of the telecommunications company. The government is expected to continue calling for private area growth to lessen the kingdom's dependence on oil and increase employment opportunities for the swelling Saudi population. Shortages of water and rapid population growth will constrain government efforts to increase self-sufficiency in agricultural products.
| Saudi Arabia | Education | Back to Top |
Education has been a primary goal of government in Najd since the late eighteenth century, when the Wahhabi movement promoted the spread of Islamic education for all Muslim believers. Because the purpose of Islamic education was to ensure that the believer would understand God's laws and live his or her life in accordance with them, classes for reading and memorizing the Quran along with selections from the hadith were sponsored in towns and villages throughout the peninsula. At the most elementary level, education took place in the kuttab, a class of Quran recitation for children usually attached to a mosque, or as a private tutorial held in the home under the direction of a male or female professional Quran reader, which was usually the case for girls. In the late 19th century, nonreligious subjects were also taught under Ottoman rule in the Hijaz and Al Ahsa Province, where kuttab schools specializing in Quran memorization sometimes included arithmetic, foreign language, and Arabic reading in the curriculum. Because the purpose of basic religious learning was to know the contents of holy scripture, the ability to read Arabic text was not a priority, and illiteracy remained widespread in the peninsula. In 1970, in comparison to all countries in the Middle East and North Africa, the literacy rate of 15% for men and 2% for women in Saudi Arabia was lower only in Yemen and Afghanistan. For this reason, the steep rise in literacy rates--by 1990 the literacy rate for men had risen to 73% and that for women to 48%--must be seen as an achievement.
Women going abroad to study were a particular concern for the ulama in the Department of Religious Research, Missionary Activities, and Guidance. In 1982 government scholarships for women to study abroad were sharply curtailed. Enforcement of the mahram rule, whereby women were not allowed to travel without their closest male relative as a chaperon, discouraged prospective students from studying abroad. In 1990 there were almost three times as many men studying abroad on government scholarships as there were women, whereas in 1984 more than half were women. Education in Saudi Arabia is free but not compulsory. In the 1996 school year the nation had 11,506 primary schools with a total enrollment of 2.3 million pupils; secondary schools listed 1.5 million students. Some 94% of Saudi adults were literate in 2001, a dramatic increase from the less than 3% literacy rate in the early 1960s.
| Saudi Arabia | Government | Back to Top |
Government: Absolute monarchy that based legitimacy on fundamentalist interpretation of Islamic law. King head of state and head of government; no written constitution or elected legislature. Crown prince deputy prime minister; other royal family members headed valuable ministries and agencies. Political system highly centralized; judiciary and local officials appointed by king through Ministry of Justice and Ministry of Interior.
Politics: Political parties, labor unions, and professional associations banned. Informal political activity centered around around 4,000 princes of Al Faisal branch of Al Saud ruling family. On valuable policy matters, king sought consensus among senior princes of major Al Saud clans. King also consulted senior ulama (religious scholars) of Al ash Shaykh family and leaders of main tribal families. Western-educated professional and technocratic elite had limited determine through alliances with various Saudi princes.
Foreign Relations: Founding member of United Nations (UN), League of Arab States, Organization of the Islamic Conference, and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Participated in UN specialized agencies, World Bank, Nonaligned Movement, Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, and Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries. Security, Arab nationalism, and Islam main foreign policy concerns. Objective to prevent radical Arab nationalist or radical Islamic movements from threatening stability of Arabian Peninsula. Most active Arab participant in war against Iraq, 1991. Historically had close ties with United States, contempt differences over Israel. Closest regional allies fellow members of GCC and Egypt.
| Saudi Arabia | History | Back to Top |
Abd Al Aziz ibn Abd ar Rahman Al Saud rose to prominence in the Arabian Peninsula in the early 20th century. He belonged to the Saud family , who had controlled most of Arabia during the nineteenth century. By the time of Abd al Aziz, the rival Al Rashid family forced the Al Saud into exile in Kuwait. Thus, it was from Kuwait that Abd al Aziz began the campaign to restore his family to political power. First, he recaptured Najd, a mostly desert region in the approximate center of the peninsula and the orthodox homeland of the Al Saud. During the mid-1920s, Abd al Aziz's armies had captured the Islamic shrine cities of Mecca and Medina. In 1932, he declared that the area under his control would be known as the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
The tendency to draw inspiration from the past was an essential part of the Saudi state. The historical parallels between the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and its Arab and Islamic past were striking. In conquering Arabia, for instance, Abd al Aziz brought together the region's nomadic tribes in much the same way that his great-grandfather, Muhammad ibn Saud, had done a century earlier.
| Saudi Arabia | Introduction | Back to Top |
Saudi Arabia, monarchy of the Middle East, occupying most of the Arabian Peninsula, and bordered on the north by Jordan, Iraq, and Kuwait; on the east by the Persian Gulf and Qatar; on the south-east by the United Arab Emirates and Oman; on the south by the Republic of Yemen and on the west by the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba. Boundaries in the south-east and south are not precisely defined. Saudi Arabia has an area of about 2,240,000 sq km (864,869 sq mi). The capital and largest city is Riyadh.
Population 18,426,000 (1996 official estimate) Population Density 8 people/sq km (21 people/sq mi) (1996 estimate) Urban/Rural Breakdown 80% Urban 20% Rural Largest Cities Riyadh2,500,000 Jiddah1,800,000 Mecca1,500,000 Medina600,050 (1994 estimates) Ethnic Groups 90% Saudi Arab 10% Other including Africans, Pakistanis, and other Asians Languages National Language Arabic Religions 99%Islam mainly Sunni 1%Other including Christianity
| Saudi Arabia | Land | Back to Top |
N/A
| Saudi Arabia | Languages | Back to Top |
The national language is Arabic. Virtually all Saudis are Muslims. The great majority are of the Sunni sect, although some Shiites live in the east. The Wahhabi sect, comprised of reformers who settled in Arabia during the 18th century and who have sought to purify and simplify the practice of Islam, has greatly determined the Sunnites of Saudi Arabia.
| Saudi Arabia | Legal | Back to Top |
Legal system: based on Islamic law, several secular codes have been introduced; commercial disputes handled by special committees; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction vote: none administrator branch: chief of state: King and Prime Minister FAHD bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud (since 13 June 1982); Crown Prince and First Deputy Prime Minister ABDALLAH bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud (half-brother to the monarch, heir to the throne since 13 June 1982, regent from 1 January to 22 February 1996); note - the monarch is both the chief of state and head of government head of government: King and Prime Minister FAHD bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud (since 13 June 1982); Crown Prince and First Deputy Prime Minister ABDALLAH bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud (half-brother to the monarch, heir to the throne since 13 June 1982, regent from 1 January to 22 February 1996); note - the monarch is both the chief of state and head of government cabinet: Council of Ministers is appointed by the monarch and includes many royal family members elections: none; the monarch is hereditary Legislative branch: a consultative council (90 members and a chairman appointed by the monarch for four-year terms) Judicial branch: Supreme Council of Justice
| Saudi Arabia | Life | Back to Top |
The capital of Saudi Arabia is Riyadh. Other valuable cities include Jiddah, a port city on the Red Sea; Mecca, one of the great Muslim pilgrimage centers; Medina, a holy city and cultural center of Islam; and Ad Dammam, an oil center on the Persian Gulf. In the 1980s two large new industrial centers, Al Jubayl, on the Persian Gulf, and Yanbu‘ al Ba?r, on the Red Sea, were built at an around cost of more than $45 billion.
| Saudi Arabia | organization | Back to Top |
ABEDA, AfDB, AFESD, AL, AMF, BIS, CCC, ESCWA, FAO, G-19, G-77, GCC, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICRM, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, IMO, Inmarsat, Intelsat, Interpol, IOC, ISO, ITU, NAM, OAPEC, OAS (observer), OIC, OPCW, OPEC, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTrO
| Saudi Arabia | People | Back to Top |
Estimates of the population holding Saudi citizenship have varied widely. Official figures published by the Saudi government suggested a population of 14,870,000 in 1990. In the same year, estimates by one Western source inside the kingdom were as low as 6 million. United Nations estimates were slightly less than the official Saudi figure. Based on the official Saudi figure, at the 1990 rate of growth, a population of 20 million was projected by the year 2000. The 1992 Saudi census suggested an indigenous population of 12.3 million people and a growth rate of 3.3 %.
population of Saudi Arabia is composed mainly of Arabs whose ancestors have lived in the area for many centuries. A substantial minority consists of Yemenis and other Arabs who came to Saudi Arabia after the 1950s because of the economic opportunities the nation afforded. Nomads, known as Bedouins, make up a declining proportion of the population, and the number of settled residents has also decreased. In the early 1990s, 27 % of the people in the nation were nonresident foreign workers.An increasing number of outsiders enter and leave Saudi Arabia. By the late 1980s the around number of foreign workers was between one-fourth and one-fifth of the nation's total population. At first most of these were Arab, such as Yemenis, Egyptians, Palestinians, Syrians, and Iraqis. Increasing numbers of non-Arab Muslims such as Pakistanis have been employed, as have large numbers of non-Muslim Koreans and Filipinos who are hired in group contracts for specified times. Among specialized technical workers, most are Europeans and Americans. Also of note is the number of people making the annual pilgrimage hajj to Mecca. By the late 1980s the number approached 2.5 million a year, of whom about half traveled from Arab countries and half from African and Asian countries.
| Saudi Arabia | Politics | Back to Top |
None
| Saudi Arabia | Provinces | Back to Top |
13 provinces (mintaqat, singular - mintaqah); Al Bahah, Al Hudud ash Shamaliyah, Al Jawf, Al Madinah, Al Qasim, Ar Riyad, Ash Sharqiyah (Eastern Province), 'Asir, Ha'il, Jizan, Makkah, Najran, Tabuk
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| Saudi Arabia | Time | Back to Top |
| Saudi Arabia | Currency and General Information | Back to Top |
| Countries Currency Unit | SAR/Unit | Units/SAR | |
| DZD | Algeria Dinars | 0.0484422 | 20.6431 |
| USD | United States Dollars | 3.75006 | 0.266663 |
| ARS | Argentina Pesos | 1.27336 | 0.785321 |
| AUD | Australia Dollars | 2.00071 | 0.499822 |
| ATS | Austria Schillings ** | 0.237374 | 4.21276 |
| BSD | Bahamas Dollars | 3.75006 | 0.266663 |
| BBD | Barbados Dollars | 1.88445 | 0.530658 |
| BEF | Belgium Francs ** | 0.0809704 | 12.3502 |
| BMD | Bermuda Dollars | 3.75006 | 0.266663 |
| BRL | Brazil Reals | 1.61293 | 0.619990 |
| GBP | United Kingdom Pounds | 5.34707 | 0.187018 |
| BGL | Bulgaria Leva | 1.67737 | 0.596170 |
| CAD | Canada Dollars | 2.35089 | 0.425370 |
| CLP | Chile Pesos | 0.00571263 | 175.051 |
| CNY | China Yuan Renminbi | 0.453048 | 2.20727 |
| CYP | Cyprus Pounds | 5.70785 | 0.175197 |
| CZK | Czech Republic Koruny | 0.105788 | 9.45290 |
| DKK | Denmark Kroner | 0.439680 | 2.27438 |
| XCD | East Caribbean Dollars | 1.38891 | 0.719989 |
| EGP | Egypt Pounds | 0.809511 | 1.23531 |
| EUR | Euro | 3.26634 | 0.306153 |
| FJD | Fiji Dollars | 1.67788 | 0.595991 |
| FIM | Finland Markkaa ** | 0.549359 | 1.82030 |
| FRF | France Francs ** | 0.497950 | 2.00823 |
| DEM | Germany Deutsche Marks ** | 1.67005 | 0.598784 |
| XAU | Gold Ounces | 1,133.44 | 0.000882271 |
| GRD | Greece Drachmae ** | 0.00958573 | 104.322 |
| HKD | Hong Kong Dollars | 0.480801 | 2.07986 |
| HUF | Hungary Forint | 0.0134326 | 74.4456 |
| ISK | Iceland Kronur | 0.0375029 | 26.6646 |
| INR | India Rupees | 0.0768392 | 13.0142 |
| IDR | Indonesia Rupiahs | 0.000381708 | 2,619.81 |
| IEP | Ireland Pounds ** | 4.14739 | 0.241115 |
| ILS | Israel New Shekels | 0.790661 | 1.26477 |
| ITL | Italy Lire ** | 0.00168692 | 592.795 |
| JMD | Jamaica Dollars | 0.0787662 | 12.6958 |
| JPY | Japan Yen | 0.0282703 | 35.3728 |
| JOD | Jordan Dinars | 5.28922 | 0.189064 |
| LBP | Lebanon Pounds | 0.00247692 | 403.727 |
| LUF | Luxembourg Francs ** | 0.0809704 | 12.3502 |
| MYR | Malaysia Ringgits | 0.987117 | 1.01305 |
| MXN | Mexico Pesos | 0.416196 | 2.40272 |
| NZD | New Zealand Dollars | 1.65184 | 0.605386 |
| NOK | Norway Kroner | 0.423560 | 2.36094 |
| NLG | Netherlands Guilders ** | 1.48220 | 0.674673 |
| PKR | Pakistan Rupees | 0.0624489 | 16.0131 |
| PHP | Philippines Pesos | 0.0735017 | 13.6051 |
| XPT | Platinum Ounces | 1,946.20 | 0.000513823 |
| PLN | Poland Zlotych | 0.912032 | 1.09645 |
| PTE | Portugal Escudos ** | 0.0162924 | 61.3782 |
| ROL | Romania Lei | 0.000113862 | 8,782.53 |
| RUR | Russia Rubles | 0.120503 | 8.29854 |
| SAR | Saudi Arabia Riyals | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| XAG | Silver Ounces | 17.3622 | 0.0575965 |
| SGD | Singapore Dollars | 2.03564 | 0.491246 |
| SKK | Slovakia Koruny | 0.0782075 | 12.7865 |
| ZAR | South Africa Rand | 0.330176 | 3.02869 |
| KRW | South Korea Won | 0.00283922 | 352.209 |
| ESP | Spain Pesetas ** | 0.0196311 | 50.9396 |
| XDR | IMF Special Drawing Rights | 4.67563 | 0.213875 |
| SDD | Sudan Dinars | 0.0144233 | 69.3323 |
| SEK | Sweden Kronor | 0.361942 | 2.76287 |
| CHF | Switzerland Francs | 2.23050 | 0.448331 |
| TWD | Taiwan New Dollars | 0.107298 | 9.31985 |
| THB | Thailand Baht | 0.0861058 | 11.6136 |
| TTD | Trinidad and Tobago Dollars | 0.612755 | 1.63197 |
| TRL | Turkey Liras | 0.00000279002 | 358,420.45 |
| VEB | Venezuela Bolivares | 0.00407265 | 245.540 |
| ZMK | Zambia Kwacha | 0.000838939 | 1,191.98 |
| Saudi Arabia : Geographic coordinates | 25 00 N, 45 00 E |
| Saudi Arabia : Population growth rate | 3.27% |
| Saudi Arabia : Birth rate | 37.34 births/1,000 population |
| Saudi Arabia : Death rate | 5.94 deaths/1,000 population |
| Saudi Arabia : People living with HIV/AIDS | N/A |
| Saudi Arabia : Independence | 23 September 1932 |
| Saudi Arabia : National holiday | Unification of the Kingdom, 23 September |
| Saudi Arabia : Constitution | 1993 |
| Saudi Arabia : GDP | purchasing power parity - $232 billion |
| Saudi Arabia : GDP - per capita | purchasing power parity - $10,500 |
| Saudi Arabia : Electricity - consumption | 111.6 billion kWh |
| Saudi Arabia : Exports | $81.2 billion petroleum and petroleum products |
| Saudi Arabia : Imports | $30.1 billion machinery and equipment, foodstuffs, chemicals, motor vehicles, textiles |
| Saudi Arabia : Telephones | 3.1 million |
| Saudi Arabia : Mobile cellular | 1 million |
| Saudi Arabia : Radio broadcast stations | AM 43, FM 31, shortwave 2 |
| Saudi Arabia : Radios | 6.25 million |
| Saudi Arabia : Television broadcast stations | 117 |
| Saudi Arabia : Televisions | 5.1 million |
| Saudi Arabia : Internet country code | .sa |
| Saudi Arabia : Internet Service Providers (ISPs) | 42 |
| Saudi Arabia : Internet users | 400,000 |
| Saudi Arabia : Railways | 1,390 km |
| Saudi Arabia : Highways | 146,524 km |
| Saudi Arabia : Waterways | N/A |
| Saudi Arabia : Pipelines | crude oil 6,400 km; petroleum products 150 km; natural gas 2,200 km |
| Saudi Arabia : Ports and harbors | Ad Dammam, Al Jubayl, Duba, Jiddah, Jizan, Rabigh, Ra's al Khafji, Mishab, Ras Tanura, Yanbu' al Bahr, Madinat Yanbu' al Sinaiyah |
| Saudi Arabia : Merchant marine | 71 ships |
| Saudi Arabia : Airports | 206 |
| Saudi Arabia : Heliports | N/A |
| Saudi Arabia : Military branches | Land Force (Army), Navy, Air Force, Air Defense Force, National Guard, Ministry of Interior Forces (paramilitary) |
| Saudi Arabia : Military expenditures | $18.3 billion |