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  • Saudi Oil Policy
    Saudi Slashes January Oil Prices For Asia, U.S.

    The discounts on Saudi crude oil for Asian customers in January were the biggest since at least 2002, according to Reuters data, while prices were cut to the United States for the fifth month in a row. “(The) Saudis are making it clear they don’t want to lose market share,” Richard Mallinson, an analyst at consultancy Energy Aspects, told the Reuters Global Oil Forum.

  • 'Tahjeer'
    Saudi Arabia records higher number of women forced to marry relatives

    Saudi Courts reported an increase in “tahjeer” cases where the male relative of a woman strikes an agreement with her guardian to marry her without consultation and she is then banned from marrying anyone else, Al-Hayat daily reported.

  • Security
    Saudi Arabia Arrests 135 Terrorism Suspects in Nationwide Sweep

    Saudi Arabia arrested 135 terrorism suspects in nationwide raids as the world’s largest oil exporter pressed a crackdown on militants spurred by Islamic State’s advance across Syria and Iraq.

  • Women in the Workforce
    Encouraging Saudis to let women work

    Claudia Goldin, a Harvard professor, is not just an expert on working women. As one of the nation’s most prominent economists, she also exemplifies the growing stature and independence of women in American society. So it was unusual to find Goldin covered in an abaya while meeting in Saudi Arabia not long ago with government officials in an opulent hotel that offered male-only seating areas and forbade women from using its spa.

  • U.S.-Iraq
    US troops have immunity in Iraq

    Washington has an agreement with Baghdad on privileges and immunities for the growing number of troops based in Iraq who are helping in the fight against the Islamic State group, the new U.S. ambassador said Thursday. In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press, Stuart Jones said Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has given assurances that U.S. troops will receive immunity from prosecution. Under Iraq's former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, that issue was a major sticking point, ultimately leading to the decision to withdraw all remaining U.S. troops in late 2011.

  • Saudi Viewpoint
    Opinion: The seven top Saudi priorities – Education, Health, Housing, Women, Media, Infrastructure, Diversity

  • Women in Saudi Arabia
    Video: Saudi Arabia is undergoing a “huge transformation”

    Dean Malak Talal Al-Nory told us her students have futures their mothers could only dream of. "It has been a huge change, huge transformation, in almost every way," she told Williams. "It has been a change in the mentality, in the acceptance of women in the workplace."

  • Boston Bombing
    Glenn Beck must face Saudi’s lawsuit over Boston Marathon bombing

    The conservative commentator Glenn Beck failed to persuade a federal judge to dismiss a defamation lawsuit by a Saudi Arabian student who Beck repeatedly accused of involvement in and being the "money man" behind the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing.

  • Pakistani Nukes
    ′Pakistan could have 200 nuclear weapons by 2020′

    In report released by the US-based Council on Foreign Relations titled Strategic Stability in the Second Nuclear Age, author Gregory D. Koblentz, an expert on arms control and non-proliferation, identifies South Asia as the region "most at risk of a breakdown in strategic stability due to an explosive mixture of unresolved territorial disputes, cross-border terrorism, and growing nuclear arsenals." In this context, Pakistan has the fastest-growing nuclear program in the world. And as Koblentz says in a DW interview, by 2020, the Islamic Republic could have a stockpile of fissile material that, if weaponized, could produce as many as two hundred nuclear devices, roughly equivalent to the size of the United Kingdom's nuclear arsenal.

  • Football and Nitaqat
    Angry football clubs claim they cannot meet Saudization targets

    Football clubs in Kingdom are angry at the Ministry of Labor’s decision to list them under the Nitaqat program that aims to improve Saudization levels in the country, Al-Sharq reported. They said the decision has left them struggling to ensure they are employing enough nationals. Football clubs said the ruling should not apply to them because they are not part of the private sector Nitaqat is targeting.