Gulf in the News – November 30, 2012

Bahrain yesterday affirmed its support for the Palestinian people

Source: Gulf Daily News (Read full story)

His Majesty King Hamad reiterated the stance as Bahrain joined other nations in marking UN International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People. In a message to the world, he urged implementation of all UN resolutions stipulating establishment of an independent and sovereign Palestinian state. He reaffirmed Bahrain’s support for all international efforts to admit Palestine soon as a fully-fledged UN member.

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2012 Capital Area Regional Model Arab League

The National Council’s 2012 Capital Area Regional Model Arab League took place November 10-11 at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. Over one hundred students from twelve schools took part in the conference where they learned about the politics and history of the Arab world, and the arts of diplomacy and public speech. The Opening Session of the conference featured H.E. Mohamed M. Tawfik, Ambassador of Egypt to the United States, as keynote speaker.

Students interested in learning more and participating in Model Arab League should visit ncusar.org/modelarableague.

Gulf in the News – November 28, 2012

Saudi diplomat shot dead in restive Yemen

Source: Arab News (Read full story)

Gunmen shot dead a Saudi Arabian diplomat and his bodyguard in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, on Wednesday, Yemeni officials and diplomatic sources said. A Foreign Ministry spokesman in Riyadh identified the victim as Khaled Shubaikan Al-Anazi, the Kingdom’s assistant military attache in Sanaa. The spokesman said Al-Anazi was shot dead along with his Yemeni bodyguard as they were going out of his residence. Nobody so far has claimed responsibility for the attack, which took place in Sanaa’s southern district of Hada, where embassies and diplomats’ residences are located.

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2011-12 Model Arab League Youth Leadership Development Program

2011-2012 marked the 29th year of the National Council’s flagship Arab-U.S. Student Leadership Development Program, the Model Arab League (MAL). The Models are similar in organization and format to the older and more widely recognized Model United Nations, with its 193 members. An important difference between the two is that the MAL focuses only on the 22 member countries that comprise the League of Arab States. Established in February 1945, and thereby pre-dating the founding of the United Nations, the Arab League is the world’s oldest regional political organization dedicated to, among other things, the diplomatic and peaceful settlement of disputes.

Student delegates from Bishop Ireton High School in Alexandria, VA, with faculty advisor Mr. Michael Rauer, display their award certificates after the National High School Model Arab League.

The Models provide primarily American but also Arab and other international students’ opportunities to develop invaluable leadership skills. In few if any other ways do the student participants have a comparable chance to work with their fellows for common goals and shared interests. We know of no other opportunity that allows emerging leaders to learn firsthand what it is like to put themselves in the shoes of real-life Arab diplomats and other foreign affairs practitioners. In the process, the students come to realize unavoidably and inevitably how different these international relations realities are in comparison to what they previously thought and wrongly assumed to be true based on what they had read and “learned” or not read, “not learned” and therefore not known before.

Students vote on a resolution in the Political Affairs Council at the Atlanta High School Model.

Grappling with the international challenges of representing the needs, concerns, interests, and foreign policy objectives of a government other than their own, and especially that of an Arab country, has obvious merit in and of itself. In the process, students not only deepen their knowledge and understanding of the Arab world and its peoples. In addition, they develop and practice useful analytical, organizational, writing, editing, and public speaking skills. In so doing they strengthen their ability to engage in the art of reasoned argument and spirited debate. In the process, they have an unparalleled opportunity to hone and refine leadership attributes that for many are often unavailable or otherwise difficult to acquire in the course of reading a book, viewing films, videos or television, listening to a specialist, participating in academic classes, attending briefings, or accessing blogs and the Internet.

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Gulf in the News – November 26, 2012

Top 500 Most Influential Muslims: Saudi King tops, Erdogan 2nd and See The Top 50

Source: The News Tribe (Read full story)

This publication is part of an annual series that provides a window into the movers and shakers of the Muslim world. It gives valuable insight into the different ways that Muslims impact the world and also shows the diversity of how people are living as Muslims today.

According to RISSC nominations were evaluated on the basis of the influence that particular Muslims have had within the Muslim community and the manner in which their influence has benefited the Muslim community, both within the Islamic world and in terms of representing Islam to non-Muslims.

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Gulf in the News – November 21, 2012

Iran Accuses Saudi Arabia of Exploring for Oil in Prohibited Border Region

Source: Oil Price (Read full story)

Political relations throughout the Middle East seem to be worsening on an almost daily basis. One situation of particular concern is the deteriorating relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia. The Shi’ite Muslims of Iran are separated from the Sunni Muslims of Saudi Arabia by just 250km of Gulf waters, and after months of squabbling the latest episode has seen Iran accuse Saudi Arabia of exploring for oil and gas in these prohibited border regions.

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NCUSAR Student Study Visit to Saudi Arabia, Winter 2012

The National Council, in partnership with the Saudi Arabian Cultural Mission (SACM) and the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE), organized and escorted a delegation of ten Model Arab League students on a cultural immersion study visit to Saudi Arabia, December 27, 2011 to January 9, 2012. The visit provided the young American leaders a hands-on experience in the Arab world that few others their age have had.

The National Council’s university student study visit to Saudi Arabia provided the young American leaders — each one an alumnus of the Council’s Model Arab League Program and shown here enjoying Arabic coffee and dates — a hands-on experience in the Arab world that many may have dreamed of but few others their age have had.

In the 2010-2011 academic year, nearly 28,000 Saudi Arabian students, forty percent of them females, were enrolled in American universities across the United States.  Accompanying them were more than 40,000 spouses and dependents. In marked contrast, fewer than fifty American students in U.S. institutions of higher education were among those privileged over the same period of time in having a firsthand university level educational experience in Saudi Arabia.

In an effort to help narrow this “knowledge and understanding gap,” the National Council has partnered with the SACM and the MOHE. The goal:  to provide an empirical educational introduction to the kingdom’s culture and society for a select group of American students who have performed exceptionally well in the Council’s Model Arab League student leadership development program.  During the course of the visit, the students met Saudi Arabian educators, business representatives, civil society leaders, and American diplomats in addition to visiting numerous sites of cultural, developmental, and historical interest.

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Gulf in the News – November 19, 2012

Bahrain health centre in Gaza takes key role

Source: Gulf Daily News (Read full story)

His Majesty King Hamad has issued directives to prepare the Bahrain health centre in Khan Younis to provide medical care for civilians wounded in Gaza. He tasked Royal Charity Organisation (RCO) chairman Shaikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa to implement the instructions and be assured of the safety of affiliates of the Bahrain School in Tal Al Hawa district. Following the royal directives, RCO Secretary-General Dr Mustafa Al Sayed met representative of the UNRWA Commissioner-General Peter Ford and was assured on the readiness of the Bahrain health centre in Khan Younis to receive and treat those injured as a result of the brutal Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip.

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