100 Saudi E-Stores Sell Eid al-Adha Holiday’s ‘Sacrificial Sheep’

Saudi online applications offer slaughtering, chopping, packaging, and delivering the sacrificial animal (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Saudi online applications offer slaughtering, chopping, packaging, and delivering the sacrificial animal (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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100 Saudi E-Stores Sell Eid al-Adha Holiday’s ‘Sacrificial Sheep’

Saudi online applications offer slaughtering, chopping, packaging, and delivering the sacrificial animal (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Saudi online applications offer slaughtering, chopping, packaging, and delivering the sacrificial animal (Asharq Al-Awsat)

With Eid Al-Adha 2021 around the corner, Saudis planning to observe the traditional animal sacrifice on the Islamic holiday show growing interest in buying livestock, such as sheep and lamb, from the 100 online stores available in the Kingdom.

Like other e-stores, these 100 outlets, 83 of which are registered on the Ministry of Commerce’s “Maroof’ platform, offer e-shoppers the chance to purchase all kinds of sheep with a simple click.

E-commerce stores, especially livestock e-sellers, present buyers with the comfort of fulfilling their purchases without the need to hit the market personally. Options like slaughtering, chopping, packaging, and delivering the sacrificial animal are also open to customers.

However, livestock market experts warn consumers of using unlicensed applications created to exploit spiked demand for livestock in the days leading up to Eid Al-Adha.

The coronavirus pandemic has opened the way for a significant increase in the number of livestock applications available to customers in the Kingdom, revealed Saud Al-Hafta, the head of Saudi Arabia’s Livestock Breeders Association (Moashei).

Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat, Al-Hafta insists that consumers check if the e-commerce platform they are using is registered on Maroof to ensure that it is certified and credible.

Many unlicensed applications cannot be trusted, he explains, adding that the ritual slaughter of the lawful halal animals must occur in a government slaughterhouse and under the supervision of attending veterinarians.

“In the event of any defect, the Dhabihah (carcass of the sacrificed animal) is destroyed directly, with an invoice registered and stamped by the municipality,” noted Al-Hafta.

Despite the convenience offered by e-stores, Al-Hafta advises consumers to personally hit the livestock market to guarantee the quality of the animal they are buying, warning that some of the sheep being sold online may look large and stout, but are in reality unhealthy and could have received potentially unsafe injections.



European Trade Ministers Meet to Forge Strategy after Surprise 30% Tariffs from Trump

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen gives a speech during a plenary session at the European Parliament, in Strasbourg on July 9, 2025. (Photo by Jean-Christophe VERHAEGEN / AFP)
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen gives a speech during a plenary session at the European Parliament, in Strasbourg on July 9, 2025. (Photo by Jean-Christophe VERHAEGEN / AFP)
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European Trade Ministers Meet to Forge Strategy after Surprise 30% Tariffs from Trump

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen gives a speech during a plenary session at the European Parliament, in Strasbourg on July 9, 2025. (Photo by Jean-Christophe VERHAEGEN / AFP)
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen gives a speech during a plenary session at the European Parliament, in Strasbourg on July 9, 2025. (Photo by Jean-Christophe VERHAEGEN / AFP)

European trade ministers are meeting in Brussels on Monday, following US President Donald Trump’s surprise announcement of 30% tariffs on the European Union.

The EU is America’s biggest business partner and the world’s largest trading bloc. The US decision will have repercussions for governments, companies and consumers on both sides of the Atlantic, the Associated Press said.

“We shouldn’t impose countermeasures at this stage, but we should prepare to be ready to use all the tools in the toolbox,” said Denmark’s foreign minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, told reporters ahead of the meeting. “So we want a deal, but there’s an old saying: ’If you want peace, you have to prepare for war.'”

The tariffs, also imposed on Mexico, are set to start on Aug. 1 and could make everything from French cheese and Italian leather goods to German electronics and Spanish pharmaceuticals more expensive in the US, and destabilize economies from Portugal to Norway.

Meanwhile, Brussels decided to suspend retaliatory tariffs on US goods scheduled to take effect Monday in hopes of reaching a trade deal with the Trump administration by the end of the month.

The “countermeasures” by the EU, which negotiates trade deals on behalf of its 27 member countries, will be delayed until Aug. 1.

Trump’s letter shows “that we have until the first of August” to negotiate, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told reporters in Brussels on Sunday.

The letters to the EU and Mexico come in the midst of an on-and-off Trump threat to impose tariffs on countries and right an imbalance in trade.

Trump in April imposed tariffs on dozens of countries, before pausing them for 90 days to negotiate individual deals. As the three-month grace period ended this week, he began sending tariff letters to leaders but again has pushed back the implementation day for what he says will be just a few more weeks.

If he moves forward with the tariffs, it could have ramifications for nearly every aspect of the global economy.

In the wake of the new tariffs, European leaders largely closed ranks, calling for unity but also a steady hand to not provoke further acrimony.

Just last week, Europe was cautiously optimistic.

Officials told reporters on Friday they weren't expecting a letter like the one sent Saturday and that a trade deal was to be inked in “the coming days." For months, the EU has broadcast that it has strong retaliatory measures ready if talks fail.

Reeling from successive rebukes from Washington, the EU is now diversifying its economic, political and defense networks, mostly in Asia.

The EU top brass will visit Beijing for a summit later this month while courting other Pacific nations like South Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Singapore, the Philippines, and Indonesia, whose prime minister visited Brussels over the weekend to sign a new economic partnership with the EU. It also has mega-deals in the works with Mexico and a trading bloc of South American nations known as Mercosur.

While meeting with Indonesia's prime minister on Sunday, Von der Leyen said that “when economic uncertainty meets geopolitical volatility, partners like us must come closer together.”