Global Times - Weekend

CULTURAL REFORM

Saudi Arabia eyes billions of dollars in entertainm­ent investment­s

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Saudi Arabia said on Tuesday it expects billions of dollars to be pumped into a nascent state-backed entertainm­ent sector and is eyeing dozens of Western acts, including an exhibition NBA basketball game and a Spanish-style running of the bulls. The kingdom is trying to shake off its ultra-conservati­ve image in a drive to keep tourist dollars at home, lure foreign visitors, create jobs for young Saudis, and improve the quality of life in a country where cinemas and public concerts were banned until recently. Crown Prince Moham- med bin Salman has loosened social strictures, including ending a ban on women driving, curbing the powers of the religious police and easing gender segregatio­n rules.

The government has put on Arab and Western performanc­es, including a Black Eyed Peas concert last month, that were once unimaginab­le in a country where bearded religious police patrolled the streets with sticks to guard against public immorality like singing and dancing.

But the reform push has been accompanie­d by a crackdown on dissent, including the arrests of women’s rights activists, clerics and intellectu­als. The murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in October 2018 has also tarnished the country’s image and scared off some potential

investors.

At the launch of the 2019 entertainm­ent calendar, Turki al-Sheikh, chairman of the General Entertainm­ent Authority (GEA), listed dozens of events the kingdom hopes to host this year, including auto races, magic shows and theatrical performanc­es.

“I hope national companies, banks, businessme­n, artists and all sectors put their hands together. There are golden opportunit­ies,” he told an audience that included princes, ministers, Arab celebritie­s and a few Muslim clerics.

“This is a big door for tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of jobs and for tens of billions if not hundreds of billions” of riyals, he added.

Al-Sheikh said the kingdom aims to become among the top 10 global entertainm­ent des-

tinations the top four in Asia and in but provided no timeline and few concrete figures for his targets.

Officials have previously said that reforms aim to capture up to a quarter of the $20 billion currently spent overseas every year by Saudis seeking entertainm­ent.

Last year, GEA said infrastruc­ture investment­s over the next decade would reach 240 billion riyals ($64 billion) that would contribute 18 billion riyals to annual gross domestic product and generate 224,000 new jobs by 2030.

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