Arab News

200 illegal stalls shut in Jeddah

- JEDDAH: NADIM AL-HAMID

More than 200 illegally operated stalls were raided and closed down in the Balad district in downtown Jeddah over the past month, Sami Al-Ghamdi, spokesman for Jeddah municipali­ty, said Monday.

'' Municipal officials have undertaken round- the- clock inspection of stalls in all districts in the city. Food items unfit for human consumptio­n sold in such stalls have been destroyed while those fit for consumptio­n have been sent to charity organizati­ons,'' Al-Ghamdi told Arab News.

The official said the municipali­ty noticed the presence of illegal stalls in several poor neighborho­ods and was striving to halt such practices with the help of police and other related department­s.

According to Al- Ghamdi, those stalls run by Saudis have been legalized while the ones run by expatriate workers have been shut down.

The Committee to Combat Hawkers said in a recent statement that during the last Hijri year ending on Oct. 25, the municipali­ty destroyed 3,276 carts used by vendors, 2,350 stalls, and 1,436 pick-up loads of vegetable and fruits besides arresting thousands of illegal expatriate hawkers with the help of local police.

The inspectors also raided and destroyed 1,000 illegal stalls, Al-Ghamdi said, and urged citizens to call the toll-free number 940, or notify authoritie­s via the municipali­ty's website in case they come across any illegal stands operating in any district.

It has been noticed recently that a number of illicit stalls and restaurant­s have cropped up in most streets and districts in the city causing traffic congestion and environmen­tal pollution.

Educationi­st Bandar Zamim said that the presence of countless illegal stalls in different city districts has contribute­d to the spread of contagious diseases. Hawkers have found a profitable market in the city's schools, he said, and wondered why municipal inspectors are not taking any measures against them.

Resident Nader Al-Fouli said he loves to eat traditiona­l food from stalls at street corners. However, he admitted some foreign hawkers set up their stalls without official permit and operate with scant regard for cleanlines­s or hygiene. “Is that true? I can’t believe my ears.” That is how Aboud Al-Aboud reacted to news of the offer of a specially built $80,000 vehicle from the president of an American firm.

The plight of the physically challenged boy from Aflaj, near Riyadh, published in Arab News on Friday, caught the eye of Brendan McGuinness, president and CEO, MENA Mobility Solutions, Dubai, who then made the gracious offer through Arab News.

Al-Aboud, a final year high school student, is so committed to his education that he travels nearly 10 km every day in his rickety battery-operated wheelchair in order to get to school. He takes little notice of the hot desert sun or the cold winter.

Thanks to the purpose-built MV-1 vehicle, which is expected to be delivered in eight weeks, Al-Aboud will be able to travel to school in comfort and go out in the evenings with his friends and have a more normal and easier life.

“I have no words to thank Mr. McGuinness and his business partner, Mr. Swaidan Al-Naboodah,” he told Arab News by telephone from

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