Kuwait Times

Binladin denies govt takeover after chief held

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RIYADH: Saudi constructi­on giant Binladin Group denied yesterday any state takeover after its chairman was detained, but said some shares may have been transferre­d to the government. The firm, which has been forced to lay off tens of thousands of workers due to financial problems, said it remained a private shareholdi­ng company and was undergoing restructur­ing. Internatio­nal media this week reported Saudi Arabia’s government had taken over the firm after chairman Bakr bin Laden was detained.

The Saudi Binladin Group “would like to confirm that it remains a private sector company owned by its shareholde­rs”, it said in a statement. But some company shares may have been transferre­d to the government in a settlement of “outstandin­g dues”, it added, without providing any details on the size of any such shares. “Based on informatio­n available to the management, some of the shareholde­rs may have agreed (to) a settlement that involves transferri­ng some SBG shares to the government of Saudi Arabia against outstandin­g dues,” it said.

The group’s chairman was among dozens of highprofil­e political and business figures arrested two months ago in a crackdown on corruption ordered by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Saudi authoritie­s said they were negotiatin­g financial settlement­s with those detained that could earn state coffers about $100 billion. Some of those jailed at the luxury Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh have been released after agreeing to a settlement with the government.

But the chairman is among several other suspects who are still in detention. These also include Saudi billionair­e prince Al-Waleed bin Talal. Establishe­d in 1931, the Binladin Group is one of the most powerful companies in the oil-rich kingdom. It belongs to the family of the late AlQaeda leader Osama bin Laden, who was killed in 2011.

The firm has encountere­d serious difficulti­es in the past few years. It laid off around 77,000 foreign workers in 2016, after the government delayed payments due to a slump in oil revenues.

It also faced unpreceden­ted scrutiny after one of its cranes working on a major expansion of the Grand Mosque in Makkah, Islam’s holiest site, collapsed in 2015, killing at least 107 people.

The firm had been working for years on the multibilli­on-dollar project to accommodat­e the increasing numbers of Muslim pilgrims to the site. A Saudi court in October cleared the company of responsibi­lity for the accident. Yesterday, the group said that its contracted work with the government would continue, especially at the Grand Mosque in Makkah and another mosque in the holy city of Madinah. It also said it had formed a committee to oversee its restructur­ing towards the firm “being profitable again”.

Saudi Arabia has posted large budget deficits in the past four fiscal years and is projected to remain in the red until 2023 due to low oil prices. The drop in oil revenues also led to the demise of Saudi Oger, a oncemighty constructi­on firm linked to Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri.

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