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Saudi Arabia "anti-corruption" crackdown

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BREAKING?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BREAKING</a> Most detained in Saudi purge agree to financial settlement: statement</p>— AFP news agency (@AFP) <a href="https://twitter.com/AFP/status/938084540681158656?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 5, 2017</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BREAKING?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BREAKING</a> Most detained in Saudi purge agree to financial settlement: statement</p>— AFP news agency (@AFP) <a href="https://twitter.com/AFP/status/938084540681158656?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 5, 2017</a></blockquote>
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Agree to hand over most of your $dosh, or have your head chopped off.
Can't see many 'disagreeing' to such a financial settlement.
 
Saudi Arabia's richest man has been moved from the luxury hotel where he was being held and thrown in jail after reportedly refusing to pay Riyadh authorities $6billion.

Saudi billionaire investor Prince Alwaleed bin Talal was arrested two months ago in what the Saudi government called an 'anti-corruption sweep'.

His situation worsened earlier this week when he was moved from his restricted quarters at the Riyadh Ritz Carlton Hotel to the high security Al Ha'ir prison.

It was revealed today that bin Talal is negotiating a possible settlement with authorities.

But so far he has not agreed on terms, a senior Saudi official said.

Prince Alwaleed, whose net worth has been estimated by Forbes magazine at $17 billion, is chairman and owner of international investment firm Kingdom Holding.

'He offered a certain figure but it doesn't meet the figure required from him, and the attorney-general hasn't approved it,' the official said on condition of anonymity under government briefing rules.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5270223/Saudi-prince-imprisoned-refusing-pay-Riyadh-6BN.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-video" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Watch Prince Al Waleed inside his cell at the <a href="https://twitter.com/RitzCarlton?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RitzCarlton</a> , unbelievable. <br><br>Honestly looks like the guys lost his mind. His fascination with his Diet Pepsi and his hotel ketchup is so weird <a href="https://t.co/ZoPgR8RFje">pic.twitter.com/ZoPgR8RFje</a></p>— Bassem (@BBassem7) <a href="https://twitter.com/BBassem7/status/957283409130283008?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 27, 2018</a></blockquote>
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Good to see all the vegan progressive Princes getting in line. Seriously though Waleed should be the last of our problems and a step in the right direction. Maybe MBS isn't so bad after all.
 
The person who has talked for participation of women in society, and curbing extremism needs to be removed quickly? More power to His Highness, and may he clean the country from corruption and extremism and lead Saudi Arabia to glory.
You actually believe any of that? What do think will happen to all these Princes and leading businessmen he's arrested?

Do you think they're going to get a slap on their hands and then be set free? Or do you think they're going to be sentenced and sent to prison, thus ensuring that they remain a danger to his power as long as they are alive? Two are dead already, don't be surprised if more join them soon.

And what then? Everything becomes hunky-dory and peace on earth? Will that be before or after he starts a war with Iran, with Netanyahu and Trump pulling his strings?

If you think he's the new Messiah, then you my friend are seriously deluded.
Keep dreaming, MBS now controls all three branches of the Saudi Armed forces, the only thing left was National Guard which was under King Abdullah's son and MBS has ousted him now and taken over.

Any way the Saudi public is not the one which will jeopardise their life for a Royal Game of thrones, MBS would not shy from taking brutal action if any paid hooligans try to create violence, he has killed two of the princes in this purge, so anybody who even thinks about creating any chaos in the kingdom will think ten times before writing his own obituary.

MBS has decided a future for Saudi Arabia which is more liberal and open with low corruption and extremism And he has the full support of USA and Israel in his Grand Endeavour.
In view of the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, perhaps some of the fans of MBS who have been thinking that MBS was the new Saviour need to have a rethink?
 
In view of the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, perhaps some of the fans of MBS who have been thinking that MBS was the new Saviour need to have a rethink?

I have already heard the theory from a Desi Uncle that because MBS was looking at Saudi and Muslim interests, Mossad did this hit to discredit him.....
 
I have already heard the theory from a Desi Uncle that because MBS was looking at Saudi and Muslim interests, Mossad did this hit to discredit him.....
Someone should tell the Desi Uncle that other than Trump's son-in-law, Israel doesn't have another friend as good as MBS.
 
Trump has acknowledged that the Saudis could be behind the disappearance of Khashoggi, and said there could be repercussions....but said that arms sales will probably continue to go ahead because he won't hurt American jobs. That could be a tricky negotiation.
 
Trump has acknowledged that the Saudis could be behind the disappearance of Khashoggi, and said there could be repercussions....but said that arms sales will probably continue to go ahead because he won't hurt American jobs. That could be a tricky negotiation.

In the past it was about protecting democracy and taking out dictators that suppressed their people....
even though people knew what it was all about there was still this facade.

How the world has changed now when the “leader of the free world” can openly admit that refusing to sell arms to a sick and evil regime would affect domestic jobs and it’s economy...

There’s nothing to hide now.
 
In the past it was about protecting democracy and taking out dictators that suppressed their people....
even though people knew what it was all about there was still this facade.

How the world has changed now when the “leader of the free world” can openly admit that refusing to sell arms to a sick and evil regime would affect domestic jobs and it’s economy...

There’s nothing to hide now.

I think I prefer it like this, at least no one is pretending this is about values that we share with the rest of the world. It's about our standard of living, and if someone else's suffers so we can maintain ours tough luck.
 
I think I prefer it like this, at least no one is pretending this is about values that we share with the rest of the world. It's about our standard of living, and if someone else's suffers so we can maintain ours tough luck.

I was actually going to say that it’s refreshing..
Although i’m Not quiet ready to give the Trump credit for anything.
 
Trump has acknowledged that the Saudis could be behind the disappearance of Khashoggi, and said there could be repercussions....but said that arms sales will probably continue to go ahead because he won't hurt American jobs. That could be a tricky negotiation.
The US President's public acknowledgement that the Saudis "could be" responsible means that in reality the USA has 100% definitive proof that the Saudis have murdered him.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en-gb"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">On the contrary—Most Muslims will cheer the US turning its back on MbS! When Trump assigned Jerusalem to the Israelis MbS shrugged and bought himself another Yacht and a painting. He coerced Palestinians for his boy Kushner. His crosshairs have only had Muslims in sight! <a href="https://t.co/oHn2ugndBT">https://t.co/oHn2ugndBT</a></p>— Clayton Swisher (@claytonswisher) <a href="https://twitter.com/claytonswisher/status/1051786956345085952?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">15 October 2018</a></blockquote>
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The claim about Muslims being outraged is actually half true....

You have to realise the somewhat mindset of a lot of Ummah-ists

When it was between Turkey and Saudi Arabia, they were confused and were making muted claims about Mossad being involved to harm relations between 2 brothers

The moment US, or anyone from the US says anything negative about Saudi Arabia, they feel the need to jump into the ring to proclaim their support for Saudi Arabia with MBS leading some sort of anti-American movement.

Its now a case of the brave Saudis standing up to the evil West, and these Ummah-ists are ready to support MBS in this imaginary battle. I call it imaginary as no one from the Saudi establishment will antagonize the US directly, and vice versa.


Same happened in gulf War 1

The moment US moved against Saddam, he became a sort of hero to these same Ummah-ists, his invasion of Kuwait was forgiven.
 
Shows how cruel this world is. Kill thousands of Yemenis over nothing no one bats an eye. Kill a WaPo reporter and everyone says this is too much. I hope MBS gets punished for this.
 
Three senior members of Saudi Arabia's royal family, including the king's brother, have been arrested for unexplained reasons, US media report.

Two of the men were among the kingdom's most influential figures.

The detentions have been linked to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

In 2017 dozens of Saudi royal figures, ministers and businessmen were confined to the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh after the crown prince ordered their arrests.

Mohammed bin Salman is considered the de facto ruler of the kingdom, after he was named crown prince by his father in 2016.

The detentions took place early on Friday morning, report the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.

The three men reported to have been arrested are the king's younger brother Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, former crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef, and a royal cousin, Prince Nawaf bin Nayef.

Mohammed bin Nayef was interior minister until he was removed from his role and placed under house arrest by Mohammed Bin Salman in 2017.

Guards arrived at the homes of the royals wearing masks and dressed in black, and searched their homes, the Wall Street Journal says.

If confirmed, this would be a significant move by Saudi Arabia's powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to consolidate his position. Prince Ahmed bin Abdelaziz is one of the last surviving sons of the country's founder, King Abdelaziz, and widely respected amongst older members of the ruling family.

The other senior prince, Mohammed bin Nayef, was next in line to the throne before he was suddenly replaced three years ago. Before that, as interior minister, he was credited with defeating the al-Qaeda insurgency that gripped Saudi Arabia in the 2000s.

There has been no immediate official confirmation or denial of the story published in the US media but palace affairs in Saudi Arabia are often shrouded in secrecy.

Mohammed bin Salman won international praise in 2016 when he promised a series of economic and social reforms to the deeply-conservative country.

However he has been embroiled in a series of scandals including the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi embassy in Istanbul in 2018.

In recent days Saudi Arabia has been taking measures to contain the spread of the deadly new coronavirus.

Foreign pilgrims have been prevented from entering the country to perform Umrah, or pilgrimage, and there are questions over whether the hugely important annual Hajj will go ahead this year,

On Thursday Islam's holiest city Mecca was emptied to allow a deep clean.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-51778781
 
All you need to know about latest Saudi crackdown in 500 words

Saudi Arabia has launched a new crackdown against senior royals and top officials, according to several reports, in what appears to be Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's latest effort to consolidate control of all major levers of power inside the kingdom.

Among those held in the sweeping crackdown are two of the most prominent royal family members: Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, a younger brother of Saudi King Salman, and Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the king's nephew and former crown prince.

There has been no official comment from Saudi authorities on the arrests, but reports emerging on Friday triggered rumours about a possible coup attempt or sudden deterioration in the health of the 84-year-old king.

Here is what happened:

Arrests

The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) on Friday cited sources familiar with the matter as saying masked guards with the royal court arrested Prince Ahmed and Mohammed bin Nayef at their homes. The guards also detained a brother of Mohammed bin Nayef, according to the reported.

The sweep broadened on Saturday, the Journal later reported, to include dozens of interior ministry officials, senior army officers and others suspected of supporting a coup attempt. Prince Nayef bin Ahmed, a former army head of intelligence, was also among the detainees.

The detentions raised speculation about King Salman's health and whether MBS's ascension to the throne was imminent.

However, on Sunday, the official Saudi Press Agency released images of the king presiding over the swearing-in ceremony of newly appointed Saudi ambassadors to Ukraine and Uruguay.

On Sunday, Interior Minister Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Nayef and his father Prince Saud bin Nayef were released after being questioned by the royal court, the Journal reported.

Transition talk

A son of King Salman, MBS has moved to consolidate power since replacing his cousin, Mohammed bin Nayef, as heir to the throne in 2017.

Later that year, dozens of senior members of the royal family and billionaire businessmen were rounded up and detained at a luxury hotel in the capital, Riyadh, in what the Saudi government labelled as part of an anti-corruption drive.

Analysts say the crackdown is an attempt by MBS, viewed as the kingdom's de facto ruler, to consolidate his power within the royal family.

In particular, the arrest of the two senior princes - seen as possible alternatives to MBS - is most likely a pre-emptive move to manage risks of a transition from King Salman to his son, according to observers.

MBS has fuelled resentment among some in the ruling family by tightening his grip on power and some question his ability to lead following the international backlash to the 2018 murder of prominent journalist Jamal Khashoggi by Saudi agents, as well as a major attack on the kingdom's oil infrastructure last year that was claimed by Yemen's Houthi rebels, sources told Reuters news agency.

Saudi insiders and Western diplomats say the family is unlikely to oppose MBS while King Salman is alive, recognising that he is unlikely to turn against his favourite son.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/latest-saudi-crackdown-500-words-200309071343433.html
 
Saudi Arabia detains hundreds of government officials

Hundreds of government officials, including military and security personnel, have been detained in Saudi Arabia on charges involving bribery and exploiting public office.

The announcement late on Sunday by Saudi's National Anti-Corruption Commission (Nazaha) also said that investigators would bring charges against those currently held in custody.

In 2017, security forces arrested scores of princes and members of the kingdom's political and business elite in what was billed as in an attempt to combat corruption among the higher echelons of the Saudi bureaucracy.

Those arrested were locked up for weeks in the luxurious Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh, where some were reportedly physically mistreated.

According to experts, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), the son of King Salman and heir to the throne, used the purge to remove people who could potentially pose a political threat.

The royal court said last year it was winding down that campaign after 15 months, but the authorities later said they would start going after graft by ordinary government employees.

Nazaha tweeted on Sunday that it had arrested and would indict 298 people on crimes such as bribery, embezzlement and abuse of power involving a total of 379 million riyals ($101m).

Among those implicated are eight defence ministry officers suspected of bribery and money laundering regarding government contracts during the years 2005-2015; and 29 interior ministry officials in the Eastern Province, including three colonels, a major general and a brigadier general.

Two judges were also detained for receiving bribes, along with nine officials accused of corruption at Riyadh's Almaarefa University, following a partial building collapse which caused deaths and injuries, Nazaha said.

The agency provided no names and few other details about the cases.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...eds-government-officials-200316073516389.html
 
Saudi Arabia: Prominent human rights activist 'dies in jail'

A leading Saudi human rights campaigner jailed since 2013 for dissident activity has died in prison, activists say.

Abdullah al-Hamid, a founder of the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association, had been in a coma after suffering a stroke.

Human rights groups had long called for his release.

Saudi Arabia, widely criticised for its intolerance of dissent, has not commented on the reports.

Dr al-Hamid, 69, and another activist, Mohammed al-Qahtani, were convicted at the same time and sentenced to 10 and 11 years respectively.

The men had been found guilty of a raft of offences, including "inciting disorder".

Fellow Saudi activists have accused the Saudi authorities of not giving Dr al-Hamid adequate medical treatment since he fell ill two weeks ago.

British-based Saudi academic, Madawi al-Rasheed - who is an outspoken critic of the current Saudi leadership - has described Dr al-Hamid as a symbol of the struggle for human rights.

The Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association was shut down after its co-founders were convicted.

Campaigners say Saudi Arabia has one of the worst records for human rights in the world, with freedom of expression severely curtailed and critics of the government subject to what they say is arbitrary arrest.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-52411453
 
Saudi Arabia is to abolish flogging as a form of punishment, according to a legal document seen by media outlets.

The directive from the Gulf kingdom's Supreme Court says flogging will be replaced by imprisonment or fines.

It says this is an extension of human rights reforms brought by King Salman and his son, the country's de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Saudi Arabia has been criticised over the jailing of dissidents, and the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Saudi Arabia 'executed record number of people in 2019'Reform and repression go hand in hand in Saudi ArabiaHow Saudi’s ‘new direction’ is changing life for women like me

Campaigners say Saudi Arabia has one of the worst records for human rights in the world, with freedom of expression severely curtailed and critics of the government subject to what they say is arbitrary arrest.

'Bad image'

The last time that flogging in Saudi Arabia hit the headlines was in 2015 when blogger Raif Badawi was subjected to the punishment in public, reportedly after being convicted of cybercrime and insulting Islam.

He had been due to receive 1,000 lashes in weekly beatings but global outrage and reports that he nearly died put a stop to that part of his sentence.

BBC Arab affairs editor Sebastian Usher says it was clearly bad for Saudi Arabia's image.

Now, the practice looks like it will be done away with entirely.

But waves of arrests of every type of dissident under the king and the crown prince - including of women's rights campaigners - undercut this claim, our reporter says.

Earlier on Friday, the most prominent Saudi human rights campaigner died in jail after a stroke which fellow activists say was due to medical neglect by the authorities.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-52420307
 
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Saudi Arabia will no longer impose the death penalty on people who committed crimes while still minors, the country's Human Rights Commission says.

The announcement, citing a royal decree by King Salman, comes two days after the country said it would ban flogging.

The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child - which Riyadh has signed - says capital punishment should not be used for offences carried out by minors.

Activists say Saudi Arabia has one of the world's worst human rights records.

They say freedom of expression is severely curtailed and critics of the government are subject to what they say is arbitrary arrest.

A record 184 people were executed in the kingdom in 2019, according to human rights group Amnesty International. At least one case involved a man convicted of a crime committed when he was a minor, the rights group reported.

In a statement published on Sunday, Awwad Alawwad, president of the state-backed commission, said a royal decree had replaced executions in cases where crimes were committed by minors with a maximum penalty of 10 years in a juvenile detention centre.

"The decree helps us in establishing a more modern penal code," Mr Alawwad said.

It was unclear when the decision - which was not immediately carried on state media - would come into effect.

The kingdom's human rights record has remained under intense scrutiny, despite recent changes, following the brutal murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018, while many civil rights and women's rights activists remain in prison.

Earlier this week, the most prominent Saudi human rights campaigner died in jail after a stroke which fellow activists say was due to medical neglect by the authorities.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-52436335
 
Can't believe it took this long to ban capital punishment for minors, but progress is still positive.
 
Family of ex-Saudi intelligence officer being targeted: Report

The son of a powerful former Saudi intelligence officer living abroad says members of the family are being targeted back home in a bid by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) to force his father to return to the kingdom.

Saad al-Jabri, for years one of Saudi Arabia's leading intelligence officials, has been fearing for his life since moving to Canada in 2017 and has been resisting pressure from MBS to go back to the kingdom, according to a New York Times report on Thursday citing his son, Khalid al-Jabri, and associates.

Khalid told the newspaper that his brother, sister and uncle have been arrested by Saudi security forces and held incommunicado since March.

"It has been weeks and we don't know where they are," he was quoted as saying. "They were kidnapped from their beds. I don't even know if they are alive or dead."

There was no comment by Saudi Arabia.

Power struggle
An expert in artificial intelligence, Saad held a number of top positions in Saudi Arabia and played a key role in its fight against al-Qaeda and security coordination with its ally, the United States.

His son and former US officials who worked with him say MBS wants to force al-Jabri to return to the kingdom as he fears anyone outside of his control who has access to secret information, the Times reported.

Gerald Feierstein, senior vice president at the Middle East Institute in Washington, DC who dealt with al-Jabri while serving as the US ambassador to Yemen, told the newspaper that al-Jabri was acquainted with so many sensitive issues that he would know "where the bodies are buried", and possibly unflattering information about MBS.

Al-Jabri's intelligence career came to an end following the power struggle between MBS and Prince Mohammed bin Nayef (MBN), the former crown prince. He was out of the kingdom in 2017 when MBN was replaced as heir to the throne when King Salman elevated his son, MBS, to the role and gave him wide authority to become the kingdom's de facto ruler.

MBN was put under house arrest at the time, according to reports. He was arrested in March this year, reportedly because he was complaining privately about how MBS was running Saudi Arabia.

Al-Jabri, seen as a very close ally of MBN, decided to not settle in the US despite his deep ties there because he was concerned that the administration of President Donald Trump would send him back to Saudi Arabia if MBS requested it, a person briefed on the case told the Times.

The newspaper said when al-Jabri left Saudi Arabia, authorities began placing restrictions on two of his children who remained in the country - Sarah, 20, and Omar, 21.

They had planned to study in the US but within hours of MBS's rise to crown prince, they discovered that they were barred from leaving the kingdom, according to Khalid al-Jabri.

Their bank accounts were frozen and they were summoned for questioning and told to encourage their father to come home, he said.

Security forces took them from their beds in their home in the capital, Riyadh, at dawn on March 16, and the family is growing increasingly worried as they have not heard from them since.

Last week, authorities also arrested al-Jabri's brother, Abdulrahman al-Jabri, a US-educated electrical engineering.

Lobbying for release
Saudi Arabia's human rights record has come under intense scrutiny following the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul in October 2018.

The CIA and others reportedly believe MBS ordered the killing of Khashoggi, who wrote opinion columns critical of the crown prince in The Washington Post. Saudi Arabia denies any involvement by MBS in the case.

Khashoggi's killing has changed the situation for those who once felt safe abroad, and the al-Jabri family has now hired a Washington-based lobbying firm to press for the release of the detained relatives.

Gulf Affairs analyst Sigurd Neubauer told Al Jazeera the detentions are tarnishing Saudi Arabia's international reputation, however, any release expected from lobbying depends on the upcoming US presidential election.

"The long game is tied to the US presidential election. In the event Joe Biden wins, I think that we can see a whole sale of releases of high profile Saudi dissidents and members of the royal family," Neubauer said.

"President Trump has personalised his relationship with Crown Prince Mohammed, and it is unlikely that any sort of lobbying will sway him in the immediate to long term. But these developments are unfortunately only adding to the already severely damaged reputation that Saudi has in the US."
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...-officer-targeted-report-200522065325191.html
 
'Saudi game of thrones': Pressure grows to release jailed prince

A $2m US lobbying effort and petitions from European legislators are piling pressure on Saudi Arabia to release a philanthropist prince jailed for two years without charges amid an intensifying royal crackdown.

The detention of Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz bin Salman Al Saud and his father since January 2018 is seen as part of a clampdown under de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that has swept up potential political rivals, individuals accused of corruption and, at times, figures posing no visible challenge to his hold on power.

In March, Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, King Salman's brother, and the monarch's nephew Prince Mohammed bin Nayef were detained. Nayef was ousted as Crown Prince two years ago.

The clampdowns have also swept up family members of Saad Aljabri, former aide to bin Nayef, who fled to Canada.

Prince Salman is seen by many as an unlikely target; the multilingual 37-year-old, who was educated at France's Sorbonne University, apparently espoused no political ambitions and earned the reputation of being a "walking blank check" for funding development projects in poor countries.

"This is not just an unlawful arrest," an associate of the prince told AFP. "This is daylight kidnapping. This is a forced disappearance."

After being detained for approximately one year in the high-security Al-Ha'ir prison near Riyadh and later in a private villa with his father Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, the prince was moved to a secret detention site in March, multiple sources told AFP.

He was mysteriously returned to the villa last week to be reunited with his father, three of those sources said.

It remains unclear why he was moved to the secret site. His telephone calls to his family are monitored by Saudi intelligence, the sources said.

But his return may be a tentative sign that international pressure for his release is working. Saudi authorities did not respond to a request for comment on the case.

Pressure campaign
A delegation from the European Parliament implored Saudi authorities to release detained royals, including Prince Salman, during a visit to Riyadh in February, according to a source and an internal report of the tour seen by AFP.

"The European Parliament already asked for information about the case in a letter addressed... to the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, which (remains) unanswered," Marc Tarabella, a vice chairman of the Parliament's delegation for relations with the Arab peninsula, wrote to the European Commission.

"I would like to ask you to raise this issue... with the highest relevant authorities in Saudi Arabia appealing for Prince Salman's release.

"I remain confident that the release would positively impact the relations of the European Parliament with Saudi Arabia," he wrote.

Separately, leading Washington lobbyist Robert Stryk's Sonoran Policy Group signed a $2m contract in May to advocate for the prince's release "with the governments of the United States, United Kingdom, France, and the European Union", according to a US justice department filing seen by AFP.

Stryk, known to have close connections with the administration of US President Donald Trump - an ally of Prince Mohammed - was recruited by Hashim Mughal, a Paris-based confidant of Prince Salman, according to the filing.

A source described Mughal, a Pakistani national, as the prince's former financial adviser who raised $2m from his personal wealth and by tapping the influential royal's friends.

The international effort is a gamble that could backfire in a kingdom whose authoritarian rulers are strongly averse to public criticism.

But, as private appeals to the rulers go unheeded, the campaign may be the only hope at a time when the kingdom is grappling with a coronavirus-led economic slump and unease is rising in Washington with Prince Mohammed's aggressive policies.

'Game of thrones'
Prince Salman is among a wave of royals detained as Prince Mohammed, also known as MBS, eliminates potential rivals to amass power unseen by previous rulers.

Two adult children and a brother of Aljabri, former aide to bin Nayef, were also detained in March, with a source close to the family calling them "victims of a Saudi game of thrones".

Aljabri, exiled in Canada, earlier attempted to get his children out of Saudi Arabia but authorities had placed them under a travel ban, the source told AFP.

Princess Basmah bint Saud, another royal perceived to be close to bin Nayef, has been jailed in Al-Ha'ir for a year, without charges, along with her daughter.

Her family lost all contact with the princess after they posted a desperate Twitter appeal for her release in April, a source has told AFP.

An unlikely rival
Prince Salman's non-political philanthropic work makes him an unlikely rival to MBS.

What may have rankled the royal court is the prince's meeting with Congressman Adam Schiff, a Democrat and Trump critic, just before the US presidential elections in 2016.

His associates say "nothing political" was discussed.

Schiff's office told AFP he does not recall specifics of the discussion, but they may have talked about "Saudi Arabia generally".

"Those who pushed for this arrest gravely misread US politics," Kirsten Fontenrose, a former White House official responsible for policy towards Saudi Arabia and now with the Atlantic Council, told AFP.

"Jailing someone for meeting with a vocal Democrat will only make it more difficult for Trump to maintain close ties to the Saudi ruling family leading up to the US election."
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ws-release-jailed-prince-200601061056792.html
 
Prosecutors in Spain's highest court are investigating whether former King Juan Carlos received millions of dollars in kickbacks from Saudi Arabia during the construction of a high-speed railway there by a Spanish consortium.

A Monday statement from the general prosecutor's office called the probe one of "undeniable technical complexity".

The Supreme Court investigation will centre on developments after mid-2014.

That covers the second phase of the 2011 contract for the bullet train between the Saudi cities of Medina and Mecca - the so-called "AVE of the desert" in reference to the acronym for high-speed trains in Spain.

The date marks the moment when Carlos, marred by several scandals, passed on the throne to his son, who became King Felipe VI.

By abdicating after nearly 40 years on the throne, Carlos lost the protection granted by Spain's constitution to the head of state.

'Institutional significance'
The prosecutor's statement said given the "institutional significance", the investigation would be charged to one of the Supreme Court's chief prosecutors and three assistants.

Although Carlos's finances have been questioned in Spanish media for years, there have so far been zero legal implications for the king emeritus.

Spanish legislators have rejected at least two proposals since the first allegations emerged to open parliamentary investigations.

Swiss prosecutors are also investigating an account operated for Carlos to which millions were allegedly transferred by Saudi Arabia's late King Abdullah.

In March, King Felipe VI renounced any future inheritance from his father after The Telegraph newspaper in the United Kingdom reported earlier this year that the current monarch had been named as a beneficiary for some of that money.

Felipe denied any knowledge of the fund.
 
Saudi pressures former intelligence official’s family, seeks access to documents

LONDON (Reuters) - As Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman moved to tighten his grip on power over the past few years, detaining senior royals and opponents, one person has eluded him: a former top-ranking intelligence official who was close to a key rival to the throne.

In recent months, the crown prince — known by the initials MbS — has increased pressure on relatives of Saad al-Jabri, including detaining his adult children, to try to force his return to the kingdom from exile in Canada, the former intelligence official’s family say. In the crown prince’s sights are documents Jabri has access to that contain sensitive information, according to four people with knowledge of the situation.

Jabri was a long-time aide to Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, who the crown prince ousted as heir to the throne in a 2017 palace coup that left MbS the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter and a key U.S. ally.

Saudi authorities detained bin Nayef and two other senior royals on March 6, the latest in a series of extraordinary measures seen aimed at consolidating MbS’s strength within the ruling Al Saud family and removing perceived threats to his power ahead of an eventual succession upon the king’s death or abdication.

Multiple top Interior Ministry officials were also detained in March, said two of the people with knowledge of the situation - both well-connected Saudis.

Days after bin Nayef’s detention, according to Jabri’s family, Saudi authorities arrested two of his children, 21-year old Omar and 20-year old Sarah, in a dawn raid on the family home in the capital Riyadh. That was followed by the detention of the former intelligence official’s brother in early May, the family said. Three of the people with knowledge of the situation confirmed Jabri’s relatives had been detained.

According to the four people with knowledge of the situation, the crown prince believes he could use the documents in Jabri’s possession against current rivals for the throne. He also fears they contain additional information that could compromise him and his father, the king, the four people said.

The documents include information on bin Nayef’s assets abroad, which also potentially could be useful to MbS in putting pressure on his predecessor, said the two well-connected Saudis and a former regional security official. Jabri also has access to sensitive files relating to the financial dealings of senior royals, including King Salman and MbS, said one of the well-connected Saudi sources, the former regional security official and a diplomat.

The diplomat said some of the information related to land deals and transactions, without elaborating beyond saying that they related to King Salman during his time as governor of Riyadh, a position he held for nearly four decades prior to his 2015 ascension to the throne.

One of the well-connected Saudi sources said the crown prince wants to press charges against bin Nayef relating to allegations of corruption during bin Nayef’s time at the Ministry of Interior. Reuters was unable to determine the details of those allegations.

“They have long wanted Jabri as the right-hand man of MbN,” the person said, referring to bin Nayef.

The Saudi government has not confirmed or publicly commented on the seizure of Jabri’s children or his brother, Abdulrahman al-Jabri. The Saudi government media office did not respond to detailed questions from Reuters about the detentions or the reasons behind them.

Jabri’s family and one of the well-connected Saudis said Saudi authorities had accused Jabri of corruption but did not elaborate on the nature of the allegations. The family says the allegations are false.

Saad al-Jabri declined to comment via his son.

Reuters couldn’t determine where bin Nayef and the other two princes are being held and was unable to reach them for comment.

A U.S. official said Washington had raised the issue of detention of the children with the Saudi leadership. The official added that many U.S. government officials had worked directly with Jabri over a long period of time and that he had been “a very, very strong counterterrorism partner.”

A second U.S. official in Washington said the United States was in contact with Jabri’s family in Canada and were “exploring ways to assist.”

“We are deeply concerned by reports of the al Jabri children’s detention and would strongly condemn any unjust persecution of family members whatever the allegations against Saad Al-Jabri may be,” the official said.

Canada was also concerned about the detention of Jabri’s children, said Syrine Khoury, a spokeswoman for Canada’s foreign ministry. She didn’t elaborate on whether Canada was taking specific steps.

“HE HAD ALL THE FILES ON EVERYTHING”
For nearly two decades, Saad al-Jabri had worked closely with bin Nayef, helping to overhaul the kingdom’s intelligence and counterterrorism operations and building close ties with Western officials.

“He had all the files on everything and everybody,” said the former regional security official. Jabri coordinated relations between Saudi intelligence and the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, the former official said. The CIA declined to comment.

When King Salman ascended the throne in January 2015, he appointed Jabri to a cabinet-level position. Bin Nayef became crown prince in April 2015. Jabri’s son, Khalid al-Jabri, said that at that time the relationship between his father and MbS was “initially really good” but the relationship soon soured, spurred by opponents close to MbS who alleged that Jabri was a member of the Muslim Brotherhood. The family strongly denies it.

Four months later, in August 2015, Jabri learned he had been fired from his post via a state television announcement, said Khalid Al-Jabri, who now lives in Canada along with his father.

Saad al-Jabri became a personal advisor to MbN, a position he held until the royal was deposed as crown prince and removed as head of the interior ministry in June 2017. The two well-connected Saudis and the diplomat described Jabri as fiercely loyal to MbN.

Since 2017, when Jabri moved to Canada, Saudi authorities have made repeated attempts to lure the former intelligence official back to the kingdom, both directly and through interlocutors, Khalid Al-Jabri told Reuters.

He added that his siblings had been barred from leaving Saudi Arabia for more than two years prior to their detention and were questioned by authorities on more than one occasion regarding their father. The crown prince had made an offer in 2017 to Jabri senior to allow the children to travel in exchange for his return, he said.

The family said they don’t know where Jabri’s children are being held and aren’t able to reach them. “Every time we ask people inside (Saudi Arabia), we’ve been told MbS is handling their detention himself. Don’t bother asking for details,” Khalid Al-Jabri said.

LOBBYING WASHINGTON
Jabri’s deep knowledge of some of the kingdom’s most sensitive information, coupled with his popularity in Western political circles and among some long-serving Saudi security officials, made him a target, according to his son, the diplomat, the former regional security official and a former Western intelligence source.

The diplomat said Jabri could be perceived as a threat to MbS if U.S. President Donald Trump, who defended strategic defence and energy ties with the kingdom during the global uproar over Khashoggi’s death, failed to win re-election. The White House declined to comment.

The family said it is lobbying U.S. lawmakers for help. Senators Marco Rubio and Patrick Leahy have spoken with the family, according to their offices. Members of Congress are concerned that “two young people have disappeared after being seized by Saudi state security forces,” said Tim Rieser, senior foreign policy aide to Democratic Senator Leahy. “It seems that they’re being used as hostages to try and coerce their father to return to Saudi Arabia,” he said. He added that the Senator’s office is seeking information about their whereabouts and calling for their release.

The crown prince is officially next in line to the throne to his 85-year old father, King Salman. His efforts to diversify the kingdom’s economy away from its heavy reliance on oil and lift social restrictions, including on women, were welcomed by many Western officials and Saudis. But the crown prince has also drawn criticism for attempts to silence dissidents and marginalize rivals. He came under international criticism over the 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the kingdom’s Istanbul consulate, which the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency has said the crown prince ordered.

The crown prince has denied ordering Khashoggi’s killing but said he ultimately bears “full responsibility” as the kingdom’s de facto leader.

Saudi watchers and diplomats said that MbS has grown increasingly concerned with his standing, both at home and abroad following the Khashoggi killing. Some members of Saudi Arabia’s ruling family and business elite expressed frustration with his leadership following the largest-ever attack on the kingdom’s oil infrastructure in September, as Reuters previously reported.

There is also discontent at home, where the economy has been struck hard by the coronavirus pandemic and low oil prices, leading to austerity measures. The crown prince nevertheless still has staunch supporters and is popular among young Saudis for opening up the conservative kingdom and pledging to diversify the economy.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...amily-seeks-access-to-documents-idUSKBN23U1BU
 
Four US senators have called on President Donald Trump to help free the detained children of a former top Saudi intelligence official exiled in Canada.

In a joint letter released on Thursday, Democratic Senators Patrick Leahy, Tim Kaine and Chris Van Hollen, alongside Republican Senator Marco Rubio, said the Saudi royal family was holding the children of Saad al-Jabri - Sarah and Omar - as leverage to force his return to the kingdom.

The two adult children, and a brother of Saad al-Jabri, who is said to hold key state secrets, were detained in Riyadh in March.

Al-Jabri had earlier attempted to get his children to leave Saudi Arabia but authorities had placed them under a travel ban, according to reports.

"We believe the US has a moral obligation to do what it can to assist in securing his children's freedom. We urge you to raise this issue with senior Saudi officials and press for the immediate release of Dr Al-Jabri's children," the letter from the US senators stated.

Saudi authorities have so far not publicly commented on the case.

'Highly valued partner'

The senators claimed that al-Jabri was a "highly valued partner" of US intelligence agencies, who had aided Washington in the fight against armed groups such as al-Qaeda.

"As a top intelligence officer in Saudi Arabia, Dr Al-Jabri has been credited by former CIA officials for saving thousands of American lives by discovering and preventing terrorist plots," the letter said

"His development of a modern forensics system in Saudi Arabia reportedly contributed to the significant curtailing of terrorist groups including al-Qaeda," the senators added.

Al-Jabri's intelligence career came to an end following the power struggle between Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) and his predecessor, Mohammed bin Nayef (MBN), to whom al-Jabri was a top aide.

MBN was put under house arrest after being replaced by MBS in June 2017, according to reports. He was arrested in March this year, reportedly because he was complaining privately about how MBS was running Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia has been exerting pressure on Canada to extradite al-Jabri even though Ottawa does not have an extradition treaty with the kingdom, local media outlet The Globe and Mail newspaper reported on Monday.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ntion-saudi-spy-children-200710070942277.html
 
A number of Saudi officials, including two members of the royal family, have been sacked.

A royal decree said Saudi King Salman had relieved Prince Fahad bin Turki of his role as commander of joint forces in the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen.

His son, Abdulaziz bin Fahad, was also removed as a deputy governor.

The men, along with four other officials, face an investigation into "suspicious financial dealings" at the Ministry of Defence, the decree said.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is the king's son and is considered Saudi Arabia's de-facto ruler, has spearheaded a campaign against alleged corruption in the government.

However, critics say the high-profile arrests have been aimed at removing obstacles to the prince's hold on power.
How Saudi Arabia's crown prince rose to power

Earlier this year, the Wall Street Journal reported that three senior royals had been arrested, including the king's younger brother Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz and former crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef.

The most high-profile incident, in 2017, saw dozens of Saudi royal figures, ministers and businessmen detained at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh.

Most of them were later released, but only after reaching settlements worth a total of $106.7bn (£75.6bn) with the Saudi state.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 35, won international praise when he promised a series of economic and social reforms to the deeply-conservative country after coming to power in 2016.

However he has been embroiled in a series of scandals, including the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi embassy in Istanbul in 2018 and an alleged murder plot against a former Saudi intelligence agent in Canada.

He has also been criticised over the continuing conflict in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia backs pro-government forces, and the harsh treatment of women's rights activists. despite the lifting of some restrictions including the right to drive.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-53980115
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/legal-war-between-saudis-their-former-spymaster-2021-04-22/

The family of a former top Saudi intelligence official who is living in exile and locked in an international feud with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman say they have become pawns in the kingdom’s efforts to bring the spy chief home.

A Saudi court jailed two of Saad al-Jabri’s adult children late last year for money laundering and conspiracy to escape the kingdom unlawfully, charges they deny.

Now, an attempt by the family to appeal the convictions has failed, according to Saudi authorities. The Jabri family alleges that Saudi authorities interfered in the legal process, including circumventing appeals proceedings, which Riyadh denies.

A Saudi official told Reuters in a written statement that the convictions of the Jabri children “were upheld on appeal.”

The appeal, which hasn't been previously reported, comes as the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden has raised concerns with senior Saudi officials about the children’s detention and trial, according to the U.S. State Department.

The family’s assertions are the latest volley in an acrimonious dispute playing out in courtrooms in the United States, Canada and Saudi Arabia between the former intelligence official and the crown prince. Known by the initials MbS, the crown prince has tightened his grip on power in recent years. Jabri was a long-time aide to another royal, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, whom MbS ousted as heir to the throne in a 2017 palace coup. MbS is now de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter and a key U.S. ally.

Last summer, Jabri accused MbS in a civil suit in U.S. federal court of sending agents in 2018 to Canada, where Jabri now lives, to kill him. In January, a group of Saudi state-owned firms alleged in a lawsuit in Canada that Jabri embezzled billions of dollars of state funds while working at the Ministry of Interior.

Jabri spent many years as bin Nayef’s closest aide at the Ministry of Interior, including helping to overhaul the kingdom’s intelligence and counterterrorism operations. Jabri, via his son Khalid, declined to comment.

Jabri’s family say Omar and Sarah al-Jabri - aged 23 years and 21 years, respectively - filed their appeal in late November in the court of appeals in Riyadh. The two siblings currently are in prison in Saudi Arabia, according to the Jabri family.

According to a document submitted by MbS’s lawyers this month in Jabri’s U.S. suit against the crown prince, the Riyadh court of appeals upheld the conviction of Omar and Sarah on Dec. 24. The document, dated April 1 and stamped by the Saudi public prosecutor’s office, summarizes the charges against the siblings. The allegations include illegal financial transactions involving “one of the accused,” who isn’t identified, as well as plotting “to flee the Kingdom in an irregular manner.”

The family said the siblings appealed their convictions, but neither their lawyer nor Omar and Sarah were informed of any appeal proceedings or a final verdict, which two legal experts said would be highly irregular if true.

The family added that by January, the case disappeared from the court docket. Reuters was not able to review the justice ministry’s online database, which is not publicly available.

The two legal experts said this would be unusual because the appellants hadn’t been notified of any appeals court proceedings or an outcome. When the lawyer representing the siblings asked court officials about the status of the appeal, the family say, the response was that the case had been blocked, without elaborating.

The appeal “never happened,” said Jabri’s son Khalid, who lives in Canada. Khalid said the irregularities pointed to interference by MbS.

Reuters found no evidence of MbS’s involvement in the proceedings against the Jabri children. Saudi Arabia’s public prosecutor’s office reports directly to the king under a decree issued in 2017.

The Saudi official who provided the written statement to Reuters did not provide court documents relating to the proceedings when asked to do so by the news agency. “All the applicable legal procedures were followed throughout the case, and they were accorded all of their rights (including representation by counsel),” the official said.

The official added that the charges on which the Jabri siblings were convicted of were “not related to the case against their father.” However, an undated document the family say was part of the prosecutor’s case and provided to Reuters alleged that Omar and Sarah concealed and used their father’s bank accounts and that their roles were “coordinated and planned” by their father without elaborating further.

In the civil case filed by Jabri against MbS and 24 others in federal court in the District of Columbia, the former official is seeking unspecified damages from the defendants under the Torture Victims Prevention Act. The law has been used in the past to allow foreign nationals to file complaints in the United States over human rights abuses committed abroad.

The crown prince’s lawyers have rejected Jabri’s allegations and said MbS has legal immunity in the United States as a foreign head of state.

In an April 5 motion to dismiss the case, MbS’s lawyers said the kingdom is seeking to extradite Jabri to prosecute him for fraud. The lawyers also referred to a worldwide freeze on Jabri’s assets issued in January by the Ontario Superior Court as part of the Canadian suit against the former official.

Khalid al-Jabri said his father has done nothing wrong. MbS is pursuing Jabri, Khalid said, because of his father’s knowledge of the kingdom's inner workings. Biden has made human rights a key issue in bilateral relations with the kingdom.

The U.S. State Department, in a statement to Reuters, said “we are deeply concerned” by reports of the detention and sentencing of Jabri’s children and that Washington “strongly condemns any unjust action against family members of those accused of crimes.”

“We have been in direct contact with senior Saudi officials and will continue to raise our concerns,” the department said. Jabri was “a valued partner in countering terrorism whose work helped save countless American and Saudi lives.”

Canada’s foreign ministry also expressed concern about their detention.

Saudi authorities have made repeated attempts to lure the former intelligence official back to the kingdom, according to the family. Jabri alleges in his U.S. lawsuit that his knowledge of "sensitive, humiliating and damning information" posed an existential threat to the crown prince.

MbS’s lawyers, in court filings, have dismissed as untrue Jabri’s assertions that the crown prince attempted to silence the former Saudi official. Omar and Sarah’s trial in Riyadh’s Criminal Court began in September 2020, according to the family. The family told Reuters the hearings were held behind closed doors, with relatives, media and foreign diplomats barred from entering the court. The siblings were not granted access to their lawyer before trial, and only two of the three judges overseeing the case signed the verdict, the family said. The absence of a judge’s signature from a ruling would be unusual, according to two independent legal experts consulted by Reuters.

A copy of the verdict, provided by the family and reviewed by Reuters, shows digital signatures under two of the judges’ names and none under the third.

Omar and Sarah were sentenced in November to 9 years and 6.5 years in prison, respectively, according to the family and the document submitted by MbS’s lawyers this month in U.S. court. The siblings also received fines totalling 1.5 million Saudi riyal, or about $400,000, and years-long bans from leaving the country.

A lawyer for the siblings continued to maintain their innocence and said the charges were not supported by direct evidence, according to a copy of a 16-page appeal dated Nov. 29 and provided to Reuters by the family. The appeal also challenges the confessions the prosecution cited as evidence in the siblings’ conviction, saying they were obtained through coercion.

The three judges and clerk who oversaw the case have been transferred to other courts, according to the family.

Taha al-Hajji, a Saudi lawyer living in exile in Germany, said that some of the factors the family consider to be irregularities could potentially be explained in isolation and have precedents such as judges being moved in politically sensitive cases. But, when taken together, the various elements cited by the family are highly irregular, he said.

“All of these details point to obscurantism and political interference by Saudi authorities and show the lack of independence in the kingdom’s judiciary,” said Hajji, who isn’t involved in the Jabri case.
 
https://gulfnews.com/world/gulf/saudi/saudis-arrest-207-officials-in-new-corruption-crackdown-1.81480172

Saudi Arabia’s anti-graft authority has arrested 207 citizens and expatriates for alleged involvement in corruption, the authority said.

The Oversight and Anti-Corruption Authority (Nazaha) said that the accused included officials in the ministries of defence, interior, national guard, health, justice, municipal and rural affairs, housing, environment, water and agriculture, education, trade, human resources and media.

The officials were charged with bribery, abuse of power and forgery. They were arrested during as many as 878 inspection raids, carried out by the Nazaha teams last month.

The arrest of the suspects was made after carrying out investigations into the alleged role of 461 people. Nazaha said that the legal procedures are being completed prior to referring them to courts.

The authority called on everyone to report any suspicious activities involving financial or administrative corruption by phone, email or via its website.
 
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