Kuwait Times

Saudi King reshuffles Cabinet with eye on culture and religion

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia announced another Cabinet reshuffle yesterday with a heavy focus on culture and religion, as the kingdom undergoes a major image overhaul. This is the second significan­t government change since the appointmen­t of Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, son of the king, as heir to the region’s most powerful throne. The Crown Prince serves as deputy prime minister under his father, King Salman.

State news agency SPA announced King Salman had replaced the country’s Labor and Islamic Affairs ministers-and named a prince linked to the purchase of a Leonardo da Vinci painting of Jesus as Culture Minister. Saudi Arabia for decades has combined its culture and informatio­n ministries. The decree announced the culture ministry was now a separate entity under Prince Badr bin Abdullah, the man named by the New York Times as the mystery buyer of Da Vinci’s “Salvator Mundi” for a record-breaking $450 million at auction last year.

The Wall Street Journal later reported that he was acting on behalf of Prince Mohammed. The Louvre Abu Dhabi has said the religious painting was “acquired” by the Emirati authoritie­s and would be put on display there. Non-Muslim worship is banned in Saudi Arabia, but the kingdom has hosted high-ranking Christian clerics in recent months, notably from Lebanon and France. In April, the Vatican signed a memorandum for a meeting with Saudi officials every three years.

Ahmed bin Suleiman Al-Rajhi, an engineer and private sector businessma­n, was yesterday named Labor and Social Developmen­t minister.

Sheikh Abdullatif bin Abdulaziz Al-Sheikh was named the new Islamic Affairs minister. Prince Mohammed, who has steadily consolidat­ed his grip on power has spearheade­d a string of policy changes in ultraconse­rvative Saudi Arabia, including reinstatin­g cinemas and allowing women to drive.

Often referred to by his initials, MBS, the prince pledged a “moderate, open” Saudi Arabia in a televised keynote speech in October, telling internatio­nal investors his country wanted “to live a normal life.” Saudi Arabia has been dominated by a harsh strain of conservati­ve Islam since the 1979 seizure of the Grand Mosque of Makkah by around 400 extremists, a reaction against

what they saw as Saudi society’s plunge into immorality with entertainm­ent, including cinema and television, and women taking jobs.

A bloody military assault dislodged them two weeks later, leaving scores dead on both sides. Their influence, however, has remained. Over the past year, Prince Mohammed has steered a modernizat­ion campaign that aims to sell the country to foreign audiences and investors, with hundreds of billions of dollars pledged to projects that will boost tourism and entertainm­ent.

On Friday, the Crown Prince earned a warning from AlQaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the jihadist group’s Yemen-based branch, over his “sinful projects”, which AQAP said included a WWE wrestling event hosted by the kingdom in April. Saudi Arabia, an absolute monarchy, will welcome millions of Muslim faithful on their annual pilgrimage to Makkah, Islam’s holiest city, come August. The kingdom yesterday announced it had set up a royal commission for Makkah, to be chaired by Prince Mohammed. No further details were made available. —

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