The Borneo Post

Saudi king to launch ‘entertainm­ent city’

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RIYADH: Saudi King Salman will launch the constructi­on of an ‘entertainm­ent city’ near Riyadh today (Wednesday), authoritie­s said, part of a series of multi-billion dollar projects as the kingdom seeks to diversity its oil-reliant economy.

The 334-square kilometre project in Qiddiya, southwest of Riyadh, would rival Walt Disney and include high-end theme parks, motor sport facilities and a safari park, officials say.

The facility highlights a “relentless effort to develop giga-projects that will help achieve many direct and indirect economic returns”, project official Fahd bin Abdullah Tounsi was quoted as saying in a government statement on Monday.

Qiddiya chief executive Michael Reininger said he expects the project will draw foreign investors in entertainm­ent and other sectors, but did not specify the total cost of constructi­on.

Such projects are the brainchild of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a self-styled liberal change agent who is the chief architect of the sweeping ‘Vision 2030’ reform programme.

Saudi Arabia has dazzled investors with several plans for hi-tech “giga projects”, funded in part by its sovereign wealth fund, but some sceptics question their viability in an era of cheap oil.

The kingdom has unveiled blueprints to build NEOM, a mega project billed as a regional Silicon Valley, in addition to the Red Sea project, a reef-fringed resort destinatio­n – both worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

Analysts say the projects could create funding pressures at a time when the government faces a yawning budget deficit and growth in the kingdom’s non-oil economy is only slowly gathering pace.

The reform stems partly from an economic motive to boost domestic spending on entertainm­ent as the kingdom has been reeling from an oil slump since 2014.

Saudis currently splurge billions of dollars annually to see films and visit amusement parks in neighbouri­ng tourist hubs like Dubai and Bahrain.

In February, Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainm­ent Authority (GEA) announced it will stage more than 5,000 festivals and concerts in 2018, double the number of last year, and pump US$64 billion in the sector in the coming decade. — AFP

 ??  ?? A handout picture provided by the Saudi Royal Palace, shows mime actors sitting outside the AMC cinema in the capital Riyadh ahead of the first test film screening in over three decades. — AFP photo
A handout picture provided by the Saudi Royal Palace, shows mime actors sitting outside the AMC cinema in the capital Riyadh ahead of the first test film screening in over three decades. — AFP photo

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