Saudi Public Transport Company Explained

Saudi Public Transport Company (SAPTCO)
Headquarters:Building No. 7995, Building No. 7995, Al-Nakhil District, P.O Box: 10667, Riyadh 11443
Hubs:Riyadh, Jeddah and Makkah
Annual Ridership:Estimated 15 Millions
Fuel Type:Diesel
Ceo:Engr. Khaled Bin Abdullah Al Hogail
Leader Type:CEO

The Saudi Public Transport Company (SAPTCO) (Arabic: الشركة السعودية للنقل الجماعي) is a public owned transport company, which operates urban buses in Riyadh, Jeddah, and Mecca; intercity buses; and international buses to the UAE, Egypt (via ferry connection), Jordan and Bahrain.[1]

Buses are gender-segregated, women and children using a rear door on urban buses for women and children[2] and front seats on intercity buses.[3]

History

The enterprise was established on 4 February 1979, with the issuance of Royal Decree No. (M / 11)[4] Sheikh Saleh Abdullah Kamel was behind the creation of SAPTCO. SAPTCO was created by signing contracts with American transportation companies to manage it, with the money being provided by the Saudi government, and Saleh Kamel acting as the middleman and collecting a percentage of the contracts as a fee. The American companies were DMJM (Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall, now a subsidiary of AECOM) and ATE Management & Services Company. The initial bus fare within cities was one Saudi riyal, by royal degree, but this has been overturned and the fare increased. On 4 November 2017, Kamel was arrested in Saudi Arabia in a "corruption crackdown" conducted by a new royal anti-corruption committee.[5] [6] It was the first purge organized by Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.[7] Saleh Kamel died in 2020.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Buses/International . 2021-09-01 . 2021-09-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210901192753/https://www.saptco.com.sa/Buses/International-Transportation.aspx . dead .
  2. Web site: Urban Transport. 2021-09-01 .
  3. Web site: InterCity Transport . 2021-09-01.
  4. https://saptco.com.sa/About-Us/Company-Profile.aspx
  5. News: Saudi Princes, Former Ministers Arrested in Apparent Power Consolidation. Margherita Stancati. 5 November 2017. Wall Street Journal. 8 November 2017. Said Summer. en-US.
  6. News: Saudi Arabia Arrests 11 Princes, Including Billionaire Alwaleed bin Talal. David D. Kirkpatrick. 4 November 2017. The New York Times. 8 November 2017. en-US. 0362-4331.
  7. News: Purge of Saudi princes, businessmen widens, travel curbs imposed. Stephen Kalin. U.S.. 30 November 2018. en-US.
  8. News: Khitam Al Amir. Saleh Abdullah Kamel: Saudi billionaire dies at 79. 19 May 2020. Gulf News. 19 May 2020.