This mega project is expected to boost fish numbers
environment4 hours ago
Saudi Arabia on Monday lifted a decades-long ban on cinemas, part of a series of social reforms by the powerful Crown Prince that are shaking up the Kingdom.
The government said it would begin licensing cinemas immediately and the first movie theatres are expected to open next March, in a decision that could boost the Kingdom's nascent film industry.
"Commercial cinemas will be allowed to operate in the Kingdom as of early 2018, for the first time in more than 35 years," the culture and information ministry said in a statement.
"This marks a watershed moment in the development of the cultural economy in the Kingdom," the statement quoted Information Minister Awwad Alawwad as saying.
Like most public spaces in the Kingdom, cinema halls are expected to be segregated by gender or have a separate section for families.
In late October 2017, a rare movie night was held in Riyadh as a precursor to an expected formal lifting of the Kingdom's ban on cinemas.
'Open, moderate Islam'
Saudi Arabia in recent months has organised music concerts, a Comic-Con pop culture festival and a mixed-gender national day celebration that saw people dancing in the streets to thumping electronic music for the first time.
Saudis themselves appear quietly astounded by the torrid pace of change - including the historic decision allowing women to drive from next June.
The social transformation chimes with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's recent pledge to return Saudi Arabia to an "open, moderate Islam" and destroy extremist ideologies.
Saudi filmmakers have long argued that a ban on cinemas does not make sense in the age of YouTube.
Saudi films have been making waves abroad, using the internet to circumvent distribution channels and sometimes the stern gaze of state censors.
"It is a beautiful day in #SaudiArabia! Saudi Arabia says cinemas to get licenses in early 2018," Saudi female director Haifaa Al Mansour wrote on Twitter.
Her film "Wadjda" made history in 2013 after it became Saudi Arabia's first Academy Award entry.
The film depicts the dream of a 10-year-old girl to get a bicycle just like the boys in her conservative neighbourhood.
This year, the country is again vying for an Oscar with the film "Barakah Meets Barakah", the Kingdom's first romantic comedy which premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival.
"Now our young men and women will show the world possibilities and stories worth seeing," Saudi filmmaker Aymen Tarek Jamal said on Twitter.
"Congratulations to the 2030 Generation."
This mega project is expected to boost fish numbers
environment4 hours ago
The hosts were skittled for 104 in the morning session courtesy of a sublime haul of 5-30 from stand-in captain Jasprit Bumrah
cricket4 hours ago
Remember? After India's U19 win in 2008, Kohli was signed by RCB — and the rest is history
cricket5 hours ago
The mixed martial arts star denied the allegation and said he had 'fully consensual sex' with the plaintiff Nikita Hand
world6 hours ago
Modi lost his majority in parliamentary elections held between April and June and had to depend on fickle allies to form a government
asia6 hours ago
Sporadic fighting between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in the mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province has killed around 150 over the past months
asia6 hours ago
Imagine if a nurse or doctor didn't feel safe to report an error seen by colleagues — consider how many patients could be at risk
jobs7 hours ago
Trump has plucked a number of presidential appointments from Fox News programs, both in his first term from 2017-2021 and since being elected again on November 5
world8 hours ago