logo
New metro cuts through Saudi social divisions

New metro cuts through Saudi social divisions

Kuwait Times2 days ago

For decades, civil servant Zayed Al-Ghamdi's social circles in Saudi Arabia were more than predictable, bound by routine and kinship in a country where societal divisions have rarely been challenged. Then came the metro. A decade after breaking ground, Riyadh's gleaming new metro opened in December, offering the capital's eight million residents an alternative to roads chronically clogged by its two million cars.
A quicker commute is not the only difference: for the first time, the wealthy are sharing journeys with the less well off, and Saudi nationals are mixing with the large expat population, from white-collar workers to laborers. 'For 40 years, I was confined to my car or restaurants with my father and brothers, then with my wife and children,' Ghamdi, a 42-year-old civil servant working in downtown Riyadh, told AFP. 'I didn't mix or talk to anyone except those I knew or who resembled me.
'Now, things have changed. You feel that society, with all its classes, is in one place,' he added while speeding along the blue line, which connects working-class areas in the south with the downtown business district and affluent northern neighborhoods. With its eye-watering oil riches, intricate tribal networks and large numbers of foreign workers, Saudi society has long been divided by rigid class structures.
But on the metro, those divisions are more porous. Metro carriages are frequently crowded with laborers, university students, government employees and business executives wearing expensive suits. 'I can now discuss general topics with strangers and even get to know new things and cultures up close,' said 56-year-old engineer Nasser Al-Qahtani, pointing to a young Saudi holding a skateboard.
Men take a ride in a metro line heading to King Saud University station in Riyadh.
'Family and friends only'
While the metro has done little to clear Riyadh's perennially gridlocked streets, its opening has been 'a major social and psychological event', said sociologist Mohammed Al-Hamza. 'The metro has shifted the mindset of Saudi society. It has made people come closer together,' he said.
'The culture in Saudi Arabia is one of family and friends only, and there is reluctance to get to know new people.' Along with chipping away at class divisions, the system is saving commuters time and money, to the delight of many. 'I used to get to work in over an hour and a half, exhausted and stressed due to traffic,' said Ghamdi, adding that he had hardly used his prized SUV for months.
'Now I arrive relaxed and without stress,' he added. Prices range from just four riyals ($1) for a limited one-day pass to 140 riyals for a month. As in other countries in the Middle East and beyond, the metro offers family carriages reserved for women, children and couples. They afford women a safe and socially acceptable way to use the network to travel to work or study. For those willing to pay an extra 10 riyals per day, first-class compartments also offer a reprieve from the busy single-male carriages.
For law student Hadeel Waleed, 20, the metro has been a game-changer, cutting her trip from the southern suburbs to Princess Nourah University from three to four hours to one hour or less. 'Now I arrive home with energy for my family and studying,' she told AFP.
Women exit the metro at the STC station in Riyadh on April 27, 2025. (Photo by Fayez Nureldine / AFP)
'No one expected this usage'
The project is one of many major infrastructure initiatives under 'Vision 2030' -- the reform program overseen by the kingdom's de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. With six lines spanning about 176 kilometers (109 miles) of track, the network serves 85 stations, including stops at all terminals of Riyadh international airport.
There had been fears among city officials that the huge project could prove a white elephant, with few Saudis deigning to use it. A bus network developed by the city struggled to gain traction as Saudis remained committed to their cars, especially during the hot summer months when temperatures hit 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit).
'Honestly, for 10 years, the question was: 'Who will use the metro?'' a senior official who helps operate the system told AFP on condition of anonymity. 'No one ever expected the current level of usage or even the financial returns,' he added. The Royal Commission for Riyadh did not respond to AFP's enquiries about daily ridership but the official suggested the figure was likely in the tens of thousands if not more.
Authorities are already hoping to expand the network, with a seventh line under development linking Riyadh to several new projects on the capital's outskirts. For Muneer, a 28-year-old government employee, the metro is a welcome addition to a city undergoing rapid change. 'It makes life easier,' he said.--AFP

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Uber to launch driverless taxis in London next year
Uber to launch driverless taxis in London next year

Kuwait Times

time11 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

Uber to launch driverless taxis in London next year

PARIS: This photograph shows screens displaying the logo of the US multinational transportation company Uber, in Toulouse, southern France, on January 15, 2025. - AFP LONDON: Ride-hailing firm Uber will launch self-driving taxis in London next year when England trials new driverless services, the firm and the UK government said on Tuesday. Under the Uber pilot scheme, services will initially have a human in the driver's seat who can take control of the vehicle in an emergency, but the trials will eventually transition to being fully driverless. The government announcement will see companies including Uber allowed to trial commercial driverless services without a human presence for the first time in the UK. They will include taxis and 'bus-like' services. Uber CEO Andrew Macdonald described London's roads as 'one of the world's busiest and most complex urban environments'. 'Our vision is to make autonomy a safe and reliable option for riders everywhere, and this trial in London brings that future closer to reality,' he said. Members of the public will be able to book the transport via an app from spring 2026, ahead of a potential wider rollout when new legislation—the Automated Vehicles Act—becomes law from the second half of 2027, the Department for Transport added. The technology could create 38,000 jobs, add £42 billion ($57 billion) to the UK economy by 2025, and make roads safer, it said. 'The future of transport is arriving. Self-driving cars could bring jobs, investment, and the opportunity for the UK to be among the world-leaders in new technology,' Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said. 'We can't afford to take a back seat on AI.... That's why we're bringing timelines forward today,' added Technology Secretary Peter Kyle. The wider rollout will also allow the sale and use of self-driving, private cars. Driverless vehicle trials have been underway in the UK since January 2015, with British companies Wayve and Oxa 'spearheading significant breakthroughs in the technology', the ministry said. 'These early pilots will help build public trust and unlock new jobs, services, and markets,' said Wayve CEO Alex Kendall. According to the government the forthcoming legislation will require self-driving vehicles to 'achieve a level of safety at least as high as competent and careful human drivers'. 'By having faster reaction times than humans, and by being trained on large numbers of driving scenarios, including learning from real-world incidents, self-driving vehicles can help reduce deaths and injuries,' it said. Driverless taxis with limited capacity are already on the roads in the United States and China, most notably in the central Chinese city of Wuhan where a fleet of over 500 can be hailed by app in designated areas.- AFP

Bitter row deepened by export curbs
Bitter row deepened by export curbs

Kuwait Times

time11 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

Bitter row deepened by export curbs

LONDON: The United States and China began a second day of trade talks on Tuesday, seeking to shore up a shaky tariff truce in a bitter row deepened by export curbs. The gathering of key officials from the world's two biggest economies began Monday in London, after an earlier round of talks in Geneva last month. Stock markets wavered as investors hoped the talks will bring some much-needed calm on trading floors and ease tensions between the economic superpowers. A US Treasury spokesman told AFP on Tuesday the "talks resumed earlier this" morning. One of US President Donald Trump's top advisers said he expected "a big, strong handshake" at the end of the talks in the historic Lancaster House, operated by the UK foreign ministry. Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday: "We are doing well with China. China's not easy. "I'm only getting good reports." The agenda is expected to be dominated by exports of rare earth minerals used in a wide range of things including smartphones, electric vehicle batteries and green technology. "In Geneva, we had agreed to lower tariffs on them, and they had agreed to release the magnets and rare earths that we need throughout the economy," Trump's top economic adviser, Kevin Hassett, told CNBC on Monday. But even though Beijing was releasing some supplies, "it was going a lot slower than some companies believed was optimal", he added. Still, he said he expected "a big, strong handshake" at the end of the talks. "Our expectation is that after the handshake, any export controls from the US will be eased, and the rare earths will be released in volume," Hassett added. He also said the Trump administration might be willing to ease some recent curbs on tech exports. Concessions? Tensions between Washington and Beijing have heightened since Trump took office in January, with both countries engaging in a tariffs war hiking duties on each other's exports to three figures - an effective trade embargo. The Geneva pact to cool tensions temporarily brought new US tariffs on Chinese goods down from 145 percent to 30 percent, and Chinese countermeasures from 125 percent to 10 percent. But Trump recently said China had "totally violated" the deal. "Investors are willing to grab on to any positive trade headline right now, as this is keeping hopes of a rally alive," said Kathleen Brooks, research director at trading group XTB. Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at the Swissquote Bank, said that although there had been "no breakthrough" it seemed "the first day of the second round of negotiations reportedly went relatively well". "Rumors are circulating that the US may be willing to make concessions on tech exports in exchange for China easing restrictions on rare earth metal exports," she said. Rare earth shipments from China to the US have slowed since the tariff war was triggered by Trump's so-called "Liberation Day" announcements, according to Brooks. The US leader slapped sweeping levies of 10 percent on friend and foe alike, and threatened steeper rates on dozens of economies. The tariffs have already had a sharp effect, with official figures from Beijing showing Chinese exports to the United States in May plunged by 12.7 percent. China is also in talks with other trading partners - including Japan and South Korea - to try to build a united front to counter Trump's tariffs. Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Tuesday urged South Korea's new President Lee Jae-myung to work with Beijing to uphold free trade to ensure "the stability and smooth functioning of global and regional industrial and supply chains." "A healthy, stable, and continuously deepening China–South Korea relationship aligns with the trend of the times," Xi said in a phone call, according to the Xinhua news agency. Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng is heading the team in London, which included Commerce Minister Wang Wentao and China International Trade Representative Li Chenggang. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer are leading the US delegation.- AFP

Pakistan boosts defense budget by 20%; slashes overall spending
Pakistan boosts defense budget by 20%; slashes overall spending

Kuwait Times

timea day ago

  • Kuwait Times

Pakistan boosts defense budget by 20%; slashes overall spending

KARACHI: Laborers unload sacks of pulses from a truck at a market in Karachi on June 10, 2025. Pakistan unveiled the federal budget for fiscal year 2025–26 in the Parliament House at the country capital Islamabad on June 10. - AFP ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will raise defense spending by a steep 20 percent after a deadly conflict with its old enemy India last month, but will slash overall federal expenditure for fiscal 2025-26 by a hefty 7 percent to 17.57 trillion rupees ($62 billion). The budget presented on Tuesday by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's government allocated 2.55 trillion rupees ($9 billion) to defense in July-June 2025-26, up from 2.12 trillion. It projected a deficit of 3.9 percent of GDP against the 5.9 percent targeted for 2024-25. Inflation was projected at 7.5 percent and growth at 4.2 percent. The South Asian nation wants to kickstart growth while boosting its defenses after the worst fighting with its neighbor in nearly three decades - which it has cast as a victory - and meeting the strictures of an International Monetary Fund finance program. 'After defeating India in a conventional war, now we have to surpass it in the economic field,' Sharif said in a statement. Pakistan must also contend with the uncertainty of new import tariffs being imposed by the United States, its biggest export market. The clash with India was sparked in April by Islamists who killed 26 men in an attack on Hindu tourists in Indian Kashmir. Islamabad denied New Delhi's allegation that the militants were backed by Pakistan. Four days of fighting featured jets, missiles, drones and artillery. Boost military spending Pakistan's allocation of 2.12 trillion rupees ($7.45 billion) for defence in 2024-25 included $2 billion for equipment and other assets, and excluded a further 563 billion rupees for military pensions. India's defense spending in its 2025–26 (April-March) fiscal year was set at $78.7 billion, up 9.5 percent, including pensions and $21 billion earmarked for equipment. It has indicated that it too will boost defense spending further. Sharif's government has projected 4.2 percent economic growth in 2025-26, saying it has steadied the economy, which looked at risk of defaulting on its debts as recently as 2023. Growth this fiscal year is likely to be 2.7 percent, against the budgeted target of 3.6 percent. Pakistan's growth lags far behind the region. In 2024, South Asian countries grew by an average of 5.8 percent and the Asian Development Bankexpects 6.0 percent in 2025. Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said the government intended to complete the privatisation of Pakistan International Airlines, a request of the IMF. Growth should be aided by a sharp drop in the cost of borrowing, the government says, after a succession of interest rate cuts. But economists warn that monetary policy alone may not be enough, with fiscal constraints and IMF-mandated reforms still weighing on investment. Aurangzeb said on Monday that he wanted to avoid the boom and bust cycles of the past. 'The macroeconomic stability that we have achieved - we want to absolutely stay the course,' he said. 'This time around, we are very, very clear that we do not want to squander the opportunity.'- Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store