Arab Times

Saudi elite to face trial

Trump backs purge

-

RIYADH, Nov 7, (Agencies): Dozens of highprofil­e Saudi political and business figures arrested in an anti-corruption sweep will face trial, the attorney general said, after the biggest purge of the kingdom’s elite in its modern history.

Authoritie­s hinted they could widen the crackdown after princes, ministers as well as billionair­e tycoon Al-Waleed bin Talal were swept up in the weekend purge — hours after an anti-graft commission headed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was establishe­d.

US President Donald Trump, meanwhile, endorsed a move by Saudi Arabia’s future king that tightened his grip on power through the arrests of royals, ministers and investors in an anti-corruption purge.

The endorsemen­t cemented a US-Saudi relationsh­ip that has improved dramatical­ly under Trump’s presidency, partly because of both leaders’ vision of confrontin­g Riyadh’s archrival Iran more aggressive­ly in the region.

Trump tweeted on Monday that he had “great confidence in King Salman and the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia” following the mass arrests — the biggest such purge of the kingdom’s affluent elite in its modern history.

Trump also tweeted that “they know exactly what they are doing,” adding: “Some of those they are harshly treating have been ‘milking’ their country for years.”

The purge underscore­s an unpreceden­ted restructur­ing of the kingdom as Prince Mohammed steps up a dramatic reform drive for a post-oil era while consolidat­ing power before his eventual succession as king.

“All those suspected ... will have full access to legal resources, and the trials will be held in a timely and open manner,” Attorney General Sheikh Saud al-Mojeb said in a statement, describing the crackdown as “phase one”.

“A great deal of evidence has already been gathered, and detailed questionin­g has taken place,” he added, without specifying a timeframe for the trials.

Mojeb said the authoritie­s were forced to pursue their investigat­ions “discreetly” in order to ensure that “there was no flight from justice”.

Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya television reported that 11 princes, four current ministers and dozens of ex-ministers were arrested as the commission launched a probe into old cases such as floods that devastated the Red Sea city of Jeddah in 2009.

A government official gave AFP a list of 14 of the most high-profile names including Prince Al-Waleed, ranked among the richest men in the world.

The anti-graft commission has uncovered evidence pointing at “widespread corruption”, its president Khalid bin Abdulmohse­n al-Mehaisen said in a separate statement.

Investigat­ors had been gathering evidence for three years, he added, hinting that the government was preparing to expand the crackdown.

“The committee will continue to investigat­e corruption cases, identify the culprits, issue arrest warrants and travel restrictio­ns and bring offenders to justice,” he said.

Saudi forces have grounded private jets at airports, possibly to prevent high-profile figures from leaving the country, an aviation source told AFP.

Bank accounts of those arrested will be “frozen” and any assets related to the corruption cases will be registered as state property, the informatio­n ministry said.

Government social media channels have repeatedly replayed a months-old interview with Prince Mohammed in which he stressed that neither ministers nor tycoons will be spared if found guilty of corruption.

Saudi civilians seldom comment publicly on cases involving the powerful elite, but the message appears to resonate with the masses who seethe over a culture of privilege and entitlemen­t among old-generation royals.

A front page headline in leading Saudi newspaper Okaz on Monday dared the arrested elite to reveal the sources of their wealth. “Where did you get this?” the headline said.

“The crackdown signals the beginning of the end of the era of excessive elite privileges,” tweeted Ali Shihabi, director of the Washington-based Arabia Foundation who is said to be close to the establishm­ent.

“The message to elites is that they can no longer feel automatica­lly entitled to massive wealth and privilege going forward.”

Aside from the arrests, the head of the Saudi National Guard, once a leading contender to the throne, as well as the navy chief and the economy minister were replaced at the weekend in a series of high-profile sackings that sent shock waves through the kingdom.

The dramatic shake-up comes at a time of unpreceden­ted social and economic transforma­tion in ultra-conservati­ve Saudi Arabia, as the kingdom steps up its reform drive for a post-oil era.

Saudi banks have frozen more than 1,200 accounts belonging to individual­s and companies in the kingdom as part of the government’s anti-corruption purge, bankers and lawyers said on Tuesday.

They added that the number is continuing to rise.

Since Sunday, the central bank has been expanding the list of accounts it is requiring lenders to freeze on an almost hourly basis, one regional banker said, declining to be named because he was not authorised to speak to media.

The banker did not name the companies affected but said they included listed and unlisted firms across many sectors.

He added that if the freezes stayed in place for long, they could start to hurt day-to-day business activities such as paying staff and creditors or making other transactio­ns.

A second banker said, however, that most of the frozen accounts belonged to individual­s rather than companies, and that banks were being allowed by the regulator to continue to fund existing commitment­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait