Tapline Becomes 1st Industrial Heritage Site to Be Registered in Saudi Arabia

Tapline line was installed to transport crude oil from Saudi Arabia to the Mediterranean (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Tapline line was installed to transport crude oil from Saudi Arabia to the Mediterranean (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Tapline Becomes 1st Industrial Heritage Site to Be Registered in Saudi Arabia

Tapline line was installed to transport crude oil from Saudi Arabia to the Mediterranean (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Tapline line was installed to transport crude oil from Saudi Arabia to the Mediterranean (Asharq Al-Awsat)

The old crude oil pipeline Tapline became a national industrial heritage site as the first industrial site to be officially registered in Saudi Arabia. Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan, the Saudi Minister of Culture, made the announcement yesterday, extending his thanks to the minister of energy and Saudi Aramco for their quick response after they immediately halted the work on removing Tapline.

King Abdulaziz, the founder of Saudi Arabia, ordered the construction of the Tapline pipeline in 1947 so that oil could be transported from eastern Saudi Arabia to the Lebanese Mediterranean coast. The cities of Arar and Tarif in the northern border region did not merely resemble Riyadh and Jeddah only, but rather came to look like miniature versions of American cities, bearing particular resemblance to Texas.

Dr. Ibrahim Al-Munif, in his book Oil ... The boom ... Wealth, recounts the Tapline’s history and its industrial and social significance in northern Saudi Arabia, as well as how it was shaped by a group of American engineers and technicians and the tribes and nomads of the northern border region. He gives a comprehensive explanation of its impactions on Saudi Arabia and the region’s future. It was momentous indeed; as Majid Al-Mutlaq, the president of the northern border region literary club, explained in a previous interview with Asharq Al-Awsat, the pipeline became 1664 kilometers long, 1300 of it inside Saudi territory. Several pumping stations measured distances were required to prevent the flow from weakening, so the company has established seven stations, starting from Qaisumah in the east and ending with Tarif in the west.

Specialized engineers and support workers were stationed at each of them to ensure the pipelines’ protection and smooth functioning.

The ministry of culture initiated the Industrial Heritage competition in July 2019, the first of its kind in the history of Saudi Arabia. It sheds light on the sites of the Saudi industrial renaissance and raises awareness about this type of heritage, which encompasses humanity’s post-industrial revolution social and engineering achievements.



Amr Moussa to Asharq Al-Awsat: Mubarak Was a Patriot

Hosni Mubarak and Amr Moussa during a summit in Cairo in 2000. AFP file photo
Hosni Mubarak and Amr Moussa during a summit in Cairo in 2000. AFP file photo
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Amr Moussa to Asharq Al-Awsat: Mubarak Was a Patriot

Hosni Mubarak and Amr Moussa during a summit in Cairo in 2000. AFP file photo
Hosni Mubarak and Amr Moussa during a summit in Cairo in 2000. AFP file photo

Former Secretary-General of the Arab League Amr Moussa told Asharq Al-Awsat that the first ten years of the current century were disastrous in Egypt. Hosni Mubarak had aged and lost interest in governing the country.

Mubarak and Hereditary Rule

Asked about Mubarak’s ties with former Presidents Anwar Sadat and Gamal Abdel Nasser, Moussa said: “Mubarak believed that what Anwar Sadat had done was right. And he used to love Abdel Nasser a lot.”

Asharq Al-Awsat asked him if the end of Mubarak’s term was painful. Moussa replied: “Yes of course. He wasn’t as bad as pictured. This man was a patriot and knew what he was doing. He wasn’t at all naïve.”

“The issue that his son could become his heir was not accepted by anyone ... Mubarak did not want for his son to rule Egypt, which is not an easy task. It’s a huge and very complicated country, and the presidency requires a lot of experience,” Moussa said.

Mubarak Loved Elegance and Joking

Was Mubarak interested in his personal elegance? Moussa replied: "Yes. He knew what to wear with what, and he valued elegance greatly.”

“He also had a way of looking at people, and he was often right about that.”

"He was Egyptian par excellence. He loved sarcasm and listening to jokes. He would laugh very energetically and loudly when something amused him, surrounded by a group of humorous people. And then, suddenly, the president would return,” said Moussa.

"He used to wake up early and sit in a pleasant little kiosk in the garden, reading the newspapers and the reports sent to him by various agencies, taking his time. After finishing, he would be fully briefed on many different matters."

Policymaker

Moussa had sometimes implied that he was a policymaker, not just an executor of policies. “First of all, the Foreign Minister must be one of the policy makers ... If he is merely an executor, then he will have no role in the history of diplomacy or in politics, nor will he have the influence that a Foreign Minister is supposed to have like taking initiative, thinking, and acting quickly,” said Moussa.

“This, in my opinion, was the case. However, I cannot claim that I was one of the makers of Egyptian policy. But I certainly contributed to many political steps and political thinking. For example, what were the priorities? A priority was to make the Middle East a nuclear-free zone. This was the work of Egyptian diplomacy, which I headed, and I was committed to this issue.”

Advice to Assad on Lebanon Pullout

Asked if Mubarak had advised Syrian President Bashar Assad to withdraw his forces from Lebanon after the assassination of Lebanon’s Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, Moussa said: "I don’t know, I was Arab League Secretary General back then. I advised.”

But Moussa said that when he went to Beirut to offer his condolences to the Hariri family, he visited Damascus to meet with Assad. “I asked him if he was ready to withdraw the Syrian army. He said: Yes,” according to Moussa, who also said Assad clearly stated that the Arab League chief can officially announce the Syrian stance to the media.

Yet, as soon as he returned to Cairo, the Syrian government spokesman denied Moussa’s claim that Assad had promised a pullout of Syrian forces from Lebanon. The regime later retracted his statement.

Asked about the reasons for Hariri’s assassination, Moussa said that the former prime minister was “bigger than Lebanon. He was a huge Arab personality that could have met the president of the United States and of France anytime he wanted.”

Moussa confirmed that Hariri had complained to him about Syria’s relationship with him.