Saif al-Arab
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Tourism
Main article: Tourism in Saudi Arabia
Although most tourism in Saudi Arabia still largely involves religious pilgrimages, there is growth in the leisure tourism sector. According to the World Bank, approximately 14.3 million people visited Saudi Arabia in 2012, making it the world’s 19th-most-visited country.[308] Tourism is an important component of the Saudi Vision 2030 and according to a report conducted by BMI Research in 2018,both religious and non-religious tourism have potential for significant expansion.[309]
Main article: Tourism in Saudi Arabia
Although most tourism in Saudi Arabia still largely involves religious pilgrimages, there is growth in the leisure tourism sector. According to the World Bank, approximately 14.3 million people visited Saudi Arabia in 2012, making it the world’s 19th-most-visited country.[308] Tourism is an important component of the Saudi Vision 2030 and according to a report conducted by BMI Research in 2018,both religious and non-religious tourism have potential for significant expansion.[309]
The Kaaba in the holy city of Mecca.
Al-Masjid an-Nabawi in the holy city of Medina.
Hand written Quran displayed in the National Museum of Saudi Arabia.
Masjid al-Quba in the holy city of Medina.
Masjid al-Qiblatain in the holy city of Medina.
Masmak Fort in Riyadh.
The old Medina railway station.
The King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh.
Snowy mountains in Tabuk Province.
A farm in Al-Qassim Province.
Faifa mountains in Jizan Province.
Al-Qarah mountain cave in Al-Ahsa Governorate.
The Rub' al Khali desert.
The old city of Jeddah, Al-Balad, Jeddah.
The 3.000 meter tall Jabal Sawda located in the Hejaz Mountains.
One of the many extinct volcanoes in Hejaz.
Old architecture in Al-Bahah.
Abha city, located 2270 meters above sea level.
Mountains in Jizan province.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_Arabia
Few countries in the world are this much visited already despite a very limited tourism sector and political challenges (lack of a real tourism visa) yet which such an enormous potential (obviously the Hajj, Umrah, religious tourism in general has a lot of sway in this regard and the numbers will only increase each year hence the ongoing expansion projects and future expansion projects in the holy sites in say 20 years from now) but looking at everything that KSA has to offer in terms of 100's if not 1000's of world class historical and ancient sites (some waiting to be discovered), diverse nature, enormous wild areas, national parks, wildlife parks, 1000's of km of some of the most beautiful and unspoiled beaches, seas (the Red Sea for instance has the second largest coral reef in the world after the Great Barrier Reef in Australia), 1500 + islands, many tropical, mountainous areas the size of half of Western Europe combined, breathtaking desert areas, tons of castles, forts, ancient and old villages/heritage sites, modern cities, above average infrastructure (constantly improving), the aforementioned religious tourism etc., I believe that the sky is the limit.
I know that tourism is an important (not central but nevertheless given focus) part of the Saudi Vision 2030, but I feel that private individuals can contribute too. A lot of jobs can be created in this sector that locals (for instance mostly teenagers or elders, could have. It should not be the lifeline as for some countries but it could be a lot, lot more than it is now. The enormous potential is criminally wasted IMO.
I mean for God's sake take a look at those links below;
https://twitter.com/saudimagazine?lang=ar
https://twitter.com/oldarabia?lang=ar
https://twitter.com/scthksa?lang=ar
https://twitter.com/saudiarabia
Obviously since many of the moronic 20-30 year old laws deriving from the Sahwa period (post 1979) are being removed and relatively few remain (I expect all of them to be removed long before 2030), this part of the "problematic" (once a key problematic regardless of money, potential etc.) is now mostly gone.
People outside of KSA and the Arab world are waking up in regards to what KSA can offer, it's incredibly rich ancient and pre-historic history (thanks to numerous archaeological teams from the world and numerous historical findings in the past few years, just a tiny tip of the enormous "iceberg", this time below the ground) and improved coverage in the Western media (aside from the ongoing Yemen conflict and certain topics - all countries have their skeletons obviously) due to positive changes on the ground (will only improve) I basically think that there is potential and a lot of it.
Tiny UAE that has, with all due respect, much, much less to offer than KSA, although the UAE is a nice and beautiful country compared to its size, but they are a major tourist attraction, in particular Dubai. Oman is doing well too and offering the "authentic historical Arabia" that Dubai largely lacks (aside from the old town). KSA could basically be a giant hybrid between tradition, modernity, amazing nature, religious tourism and a central location for those who want to explore the region with Egypt, the GCC, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen etc. next door or very close in the vicinity.
Thoughts? Mostly targeted towards Arab users and those somewhat familiar with KSA but not only. Not going to bother with troll posts or waste my time so kindly keep such comments on other sections that I and most Arab users don't visit anyway.
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