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Geographical Information about Saudi Arabia
Official
Name: Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Capital:
Riyadh
Area:
Approximately 864,900 square miles
Location:
Saudi Arabia is separated from Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia by the
Red Sea to the west; from Iran by the Persian Gulf to the east; and
from Bahrain by the Gulf of Bahrain, also to the east. It shares
land boundaries with seven other Arab countries: Jordan, Iraq, and
Kuwait to the north; the Republic of Yemen and Oman to the south;
and the United Arab Emirates and Qatar to the east.
NATURAL
FEATURES
Principal
Physical Features: Plateau regions, deserts, mountains.
Mountain
Ranges: Asir Mountains, Hejaz Mountains, Jebel Tuwayq
Climate:
Almost all of Saudi Arabia has a desert climate with scant ,
unreliable rainfall and extremely hot temperatures for many months
of the year. The north receives less than 1 inch of rainfall
annually and the south has even less rainfalls. Only the
mountainous Asir region in the southwest receives appreciable
quantities of rainfall from Indian Ocean monsoons.
In
summer daytime temperatures are hot everywhere except at the higher
elevations. Maximum temperatures in the interior often reach 130 F
(54 C). In winter temperatures in the interior are mild during the
day (in the 70’s F or 20’s C) but often fall below freezing at
night.
Saudi
Arabia lacks permanent rivers and lakes and must rely heavily on
groundwater. Fortunately, wells and springs are plentiful in the Al
Hasa region.
PEOPLE
Population
(1996 estimate): 18,426,000. 21.1 persons per square mile
Major
Cities:
|
City
|
Population
|
Year
of Estimate
|
|
Riyadh
Jeddah
Makkah
At-Taif
|
1,800,000
1,800,000
550,000
300,000
|
1985
1985
1980
1980
|
Major
Religion: Islam (official)
Most Saudi Arabians also follow the teachings of Muhammad Ibn Abd
al-Wahab, an 18th- century Muslim reformer who advocated a strict,
puritanical Islam. Not all Saudis, however, belong to the same sect
of Islam. A large majority of the population are Sunny Muslims, but
there are an estimated 400,000 Shi`ie Muslims, most of whom live in
eastern Saudi Arabia in the vicinity of Al Hasa and al Al Qatif
oases.
Foreigners
in the Kingdom: Saudi Arabia has a large foreign population
whose number is thought to exceed 4.6 million. Makkah has large
Indian and Indonesian communities. Madinah has many Syrians and
Egyptians, and Jeddah has many Persians, Yemenis, and Africans.
Foreign
workers outnumber native Saudis in the labor force by nearly two to
one. They are vital to the petroleum, construction, commerce,
finance, and health sectors. More than 50 per cent of these workers
come from neighboring Arab countries, particularly Yemen, but a
growing number come from Pakistan, Korea, the Philippines, and
other Asian countries. Many Americans also work in the kingdom,
especially in the petroleum industry. Saudi Arabia hopes to reduce
its reliance on foreign workers and to that end has made the
education of its population a high priority.
Major
Language: Arabic (official)
Literacy:
62.8 percent
Leading
Universities:
-
Islamic
University, Madinah
-
Islamic
University of Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud
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King
Saud University , Riyadh
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King
Abdul Aziz University, Jeddah
-
King
Faisal University, Damman
-
University
of Petroleum and Minerals, Dhahran
TRANSPORTATION
Until
the mid-1960s the only surfaced roads were in the
Jeddah-Makkah-Madinah region. The government has made road building
a top priority since then, and by the mid-1990s the kingdom had
approximately 94,000 miles of roads.
There
are principal ports: Jeddah, Yenbo, and Qizan on the red Sea and
Damman and Jubail on the gulf. There are 24 airports, with the main
international terminals at Jeddah, Dhahran, and Riyadh. Rail
transportation is relatively insignificant. The main line connects
Damman on the gulf with Riyadh.
GOVERNMENT
Form
of Government: Monarchy
Head
of Government: King
Legislature:
None
Political
Divisions:
(13 administrative regions)
1.
Asir
2. Al-Baha
3. Ha’il
4. Al-Hudud
ash-Shamaliyah
5. Al-Jawf
6. Jizan
7. Madinah
8. Makkah
9. Najran
10. Al-Qasim
11. Riyadh
12. Ash-Sharqiyah
13. Tabuk
Saudi
Arabia is a monarchy in which Islamic law serves as the
constitution. The king, in order to rule, must obtain the support
of the royal family, which is believed to have several thousand
members. Royal princes hold all the key national security
positions, though a growing number of technocrats from outside the
family operate government departments concerned with economic and
social development.
(Source:
Compton’s Deluxe Interactive Encyclopedia)
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