Santa Fe New Mexican

Saudi prince’s megacity shows signs of life, but challenges still remain

- By Vivian Nereim and Donna Abu-Nasr

The walls are covered with graffiti in the sleepy fishing village of Khurayba. There are supplicati­ons to God, advertisem­ents for vacation rentals and house painters. Near the local school, there’s a scribbled plea: “Open the windows of hope and drive out the despair.”

It’s here in northwest Saudi Arabia that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman wants investors to put their money to realize his $500 billion vision for the region. Called “Neom,” it promises to be the most freewheeli­ng part of the kingdom, with state-of-the-art resorts and smart technologi­es run by robots.

But it’s also here where the risks to the 33-year-old prince’s grand plan for his country are writ large. Neom is the boldest pillar of a social and economic transforma­tion that so far has seen at least as many delays as successes. Indeed, the question since the prince announced the vast developmen­t at an extravagan­za in 2017 has been whether it can become a reality.

A three-day trip to the region, which is roughly the size of Massachuse­tts, showed the scale of the task as well as the potential. Many of the locals who have lived there for years are looking forward to some prosperity, while others are concerned they will be removed and their homes bulldozed.

The area has stunning, untouched shorelines with waves rippling in the turquoise water. Purple volcanic mountains loom over the Red Sea. Historic sites include a wadi where locals believe Moses landed when he crossed over from Egypt, alighting in a valley along the water.

Constructi­on workers have already descended on the small towns and some building has started. The small Neom Bay airport, with its gleaming white interior, opened for commercial flights last month. “It’s not only a vision on paper,” said Lojain Alharbi, a 25-year-old Neom employee who works as a business analyst for the sports sector. “It’s already happening.”

In an interview with Bloomberg News in October 2017, Prince Mohammed said that by 2030, the completion date for his transition to Saudi Arabia 2.0, Neom will contribute $100 billion to economic output.

Yet looming large is not just the cost or the challenge of luring foreign investors into what some see as a vanity project, it’s also the politics. As Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader, Prince Mohammed has purged relatives, jailed dissidents, tightened his grip on the military and waged a war in Yemen that created the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis. The murder last year of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi by Saudi agents in Istanbul caused an internatio­nal outcry, pushing several prominent figures to withdraw from the Neom advisory board.

 ?? VIVIAN NEREIM BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Mountains and desert abut the Red Sea in northweste­rn Saudi Arabia, part of the area that planners say will become Neom.
VIVIAN NEREIM BLOOMBERG NEWS Mountains and desert abut the Red Sea in northweste­rn Saudi Arabia, part of the area that planners say will become Neom.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States