The cultural attache at the Embassy of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques to the United States of America, Dr. Muhammad bin Abdullah Al-Issa, confirmed that the cultural attaché quickly began forming an emergency committee to assist scholarship students, headed by the assistant director of the attaché for academic affairs, Dr. Ali bin Muhammad Al-Farihi, the director of the medical programs department, Dr. Hadeel Al-Saleh, and the director of The Department of Accreditation and Academic Documentation, Dr. Nashmi Al-Rashidi, with the aim of helping male and female scholarship students in Canada to ensure their rapid transfer to the United States of America.

Today (Wednesday), Dr. Al-Issa explained that the important part of the scholarship students in Canada who are difficult to replace are male and female doctors, as there are more than a thousand male and female doctors in Canada now, and the attaché is trying as much as possible to help them by placing them in medical programs in the United States of America.

Dr. Al-Issa appreciated the efforts of the Executive Supervisor General of the General Organization of King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, Dr. Majid Al-Fayyad, and the Deputy Executive Director for Academic Affairs and Training at the hospital, Dr. Saud Al-Shunaifi, in facilitating and transferring the KFSH’s scholarship students and all scholarship students from government agencies to the United States of America.

He said, "We started communicating with the directors of medical programs and American hospitals to help doctors replace them, and we found every welcome and support from American universities."

He pointed out that the Cultural Attaché seeks to facilitate the transfer of scholarship students, indicating that the number of e-mails that reach the attaché in this regard is very large, stressing that more than twenty American universities are ready to receive Saudi students transferred from Canada to the United States, in addition to the readiness of directors of medical programs in the United States. American to receive male and female doctors.

Dr. Al-Issa expected that the majority of scholarship students, doctors and students, would move from Canada to the United States of America, due to the proximity and size of the United States and the availability of many universities, which gives a greater opportunity for male and female students to move and be accepted than anywhere else, indicating that in the end, the field will be left to scholarship students, whether Doctors or non-doctors to choose the appropriate country to complete their study program, with the attaché seeking to facilitate and complete their transfer procedures.

The cultural attaché at the Kingdom's embassy in Washington confirmed that the attaché is working quickly and continuously with the embassy of the Kingdom in Canada and also with the embassy in Washington, as well as with the attaché in Canada to facilitate the quick and easy transfer of male and female students.

Okaz (Washington)