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Saudi festivities stress unity amid political, economic woes

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Saudi Arabia is celebrating its National Day with an array of family-friendly festivities, including allowing women to enter the main stadium in the capital, Riyadh, for the first time, to see a performance recounting the country’s founding 87 years ago.

The King Fahd stadium has previously been reserved for male-only crowds to watch soccer matches.

The kingdom has planned several days of festivities starting Saturday to whip up patriotism amid tensions over austerity measures, the arrest of prominent figures, a diplomatic standoff with Qatar and war in Yemen.

Skyscrapers have been lit green in the color of Saudi Arabia’s flag and adorned with towering images of King Salman and his son Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who was named heir in June.

PHOTOS: Candlelight vigil outside Lebanese embassy

Dozens gathered outside the Lebanese embassy in D.C. Wednesday evening in a show of support for Beirut a day after the city in Lebanon was rocked by a massive explosion. Ziad Achkar, who is from Lebanon and organized the gathering sparked by a moving Twitter thread gone viral, told WTOP the tragedy is a huge blow to a country already in severe economic crisis.
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