Deccan Chronicle

Graft charges: Saudi Arabia sacks 2 royals

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Riyadh, Sept. 1: A top Saudi military commander and his son were sacked on Monday over graft allegation­s, state media said, in the government’s latest anti-corruption purge.

Joint forces commander Prince Fahad bin Turki — a senior royal family member — and Abdulaziz bin Fahad, the deputy emir of northern Al-Jouf region, were fired and placed under investigat­ion for corruption, according to the report.

Several other officers and civilian employees of the defence ministry were also being probed for corruption, it added, citing a royal decree from King Salman. Prince Fahad served as the commander of the Saudi-led military coalition fighting Iranlinked Huthi rebels in neighbouri­ng Yemen.

He was replaced by Mutlaq bin Salim, the deputy chief of staff, on the recommenda­tion of the kingdom’s de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, state media said. The government decision to sack the commander was a “very public signal against corruption in the military”, said Saudi author and analyst Ali Shihabi.

The announceme­nt marks the latest government crackdown on what officials describe as endemic corruption in the kingdom. Senior Saudi security commanders were among a string of officials sacked last month over graft allegation­s at tourism projects.

In March, Human Rights Watch voiced alarm over the arrest of 298 Saudi officials over corruption allegation­s, warning of possible “unfair legal proceeding­s” in an opaque judicial system.

Military and judicial officials were among those arrested over allegation­s of bribery and embezzleme­nt amounting to a total of 379 million riyals ($101 million), according to the state anti-corruption watchdog.

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