Saudi
in sentence
343 examples of Saudi in a sentence
If we made all of our autos this way, it would save oil equivalent to finding one and a half
Saudi
Arabias, or half an OPEC, by drilling in the Detroit formation, a very prospective play.
For example, they charged
Saudi
foreign fighters substantially more than Libyans, money that would have otherwise gone to al Qaeda.
You see, I'm a
Saudi
woman who had been put in jail for driving a car in a country where women are not supposed to drive cars.
A courageous woman, her name is Najla Hariri, she's a
Saudi
woman in the city of Jeddah, she drove a car and she announced but she didn't record a video.
I was in the campaign with other
Saudi
women and even men activists.
The streets were packed with police cars and religious police cars, but some hundred brave
Saudi
women broke the ban and drove that day.
For me, I'm a proud
Saudi
woman, and I do love my country, and because I love my country, I'm doing this.
We sent a petition to the Shura Council in favor of lifting the ban on
Saudi
women, and there were, like, 3,500 citizens who believed in that and they signed that petition.
It was a young consultant, a
Saudi
lady and friend, who helped me sell my first project in
Saudi
Arabia, a market I was finding hard to gain traction in as a woman.
The
Saudi
blogger Raif Badawi has been jailed and flogged for insulting Islam and criticizing the
Saudi
regime on his blog.
On that cover you see Batman, Superman and a fully-clothed Wonder Woman with our
Saudi
member of The 99, our Emirati member and our Libyan member.
It's not a surprise, quite
Saudi
film ha, the director is Palestinian-Canadian, the writer is Lebanese, the lead actress is Jordanian, and the shooting took place in Dubai, and all those elements show very well to make the film far from representing the
Saudi
society.
The film had the opportunity to show real problem with
Saudi
society, or at least give us something new and genuine about the youth troubles and concerns in
Saudi
Arabia, instead it copied and pasted from here and there, and the result was a mess.
This film revival right march in a bad film industry and
Saudi
Arabia, I want to know how the director was able to stand in front of people of the industry after he making this film, work was so very bad, we do not know how cinema
Saudi
companies such as Rutana and other does not support yang Filmmakers in KSA like UAE We hope in the future to prosper film industry in
Saudi
Arabia But without such intervention Fools traders and idiots make us bad movies do not benefit the reputation of cinema in
Saudi
Arabia is like the Roman and Iranian cinema At the same time, please makers simple experimental cinema in
Saudi
Arabia such as Abdullah alayaf And others to achieve the dream of a good film industry to participate in festivals world away from the major companies interventions stupid
The chimp is wearing a kind of a
Saudi
garment.
First, will this action make the world safer, as Trump claims, or will it further destabilize the Middle East and undermine future efforts to limit nuclear weapons, as argued by most geopolitical experts not directly employed by the US, Israeli, or
Saudi
governments?
Fifteen years of Middle East chaos unleashed by the 2003 Iraq war have taught the world one indisputable lesson: nobody in the White House, the CIA, Mossad, or the
Saudi
intelligence services has a clue as to what might happen next in the region.
The EU has promised to protect its trade with Iran, but even if this proves impossible, much of the Iranian oil now flowing to Europe, Japan, or other US allies will doubtless be diverted to countries such as India and China, which will free up more Saudi, Iraqi, or Russian oil for Europe and Japan.
This suggests another reason why the US-Iran confrontation could lead to lower, not higher, prices: Trump and his
Saudi
allies now have a very strong political incentive to resist further upward pressure on oil prices.
Assuming that Trump now finds it politically expedient to curb oil prices, the
Saudi
leadership can be expected to offer him whatever support he requires.
Trump’s announcement of the move in December already generated great unease in the Muslim world (though Iran’s protests were more aggressive than
Saudi
Arabia’s).
Iraq's neighbors -
Saudi
Arabia in the south and Turkey in the north - must be reassured that Shi'a and Kurdish rebellion will not result in the dismantling of Iraq and a change of borders: both countries have legitimate concerns regarding this issue.
Several factors are driving
Saudi
Arabia’s moves against Qatar, which include a ban prohibiting
Saudi
intellectuals from contributing to Qatari newspapers.
The voluntary abdication by Qatar’s Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani in June 2013, and his replacement as Emir by his son Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, failed to satisfy
Saudi
expectations of change in Qatari foreign policy.
In this context,
Saudi
policy seems to be stuck in the past, and the Kingdom has chosen to adopt a strategy of self-help in order to isolate itself from problems outside its borders, though it continues to regard itself as the region’s power broker.
Although they constitute only 20% of the total
Saudi
population, they form a majority -75% - of the population in the oil-rich region.
Like the hijackers of 9/11, who were also Saudi/Wahhabi ideological exports (15 of the 19 men who carried out those terror attacks were chosen by Bin Laden because they shared the same
Saudi
descent and education as he),
Saudi
Arabia’s reserve army of potential terrorists remains, because the Wahhabi factory of fanatical ideas remains intact.
The
Saudi
population, 50% of which is under 15 years old, will continue watching the same old princes on national TV, some who have been in office for forty years, symbolizing the rot at the heart of
Saudi
politics.
Talks among representatives of Shia, Wahhabi-Ismaili, and other sects within the National Dialogue were recently televised, but this was pure theater of reform, nothing more, and the
Saudi
population is no longer willing to suspend its disbelief.
The US-Saudi Relationship After KhashoggiWASHINGTON, DC – The alleged killing of the
Saudi
Arabian dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a permanent resident of the United States, in the Kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul has unleashed a tidal wave of criticism.
Next
Related words
Government
Which
Their
Would
Other
Journalist
Political
While
Since
Country
Years
Regime
Power
Murder
Leaders
Countries
Between
Against
Support
Foreign