Kuwait Times

Saudi Arabia Crown Prince ousted aides

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia yesterday sacked two top aides to Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman after conceding that critic Jamal Khashoggi was killed inside its Istanbul consulate. Deputy intelligen­ce chief Ahmad Al-Assiri and royal court media advisor Saud Al-Qahtani were both part of Prince Mohammed’s inner circle. Their ouster came alongside the arrests of 18 Saudi suspects and the dismissal of other intelligen­ce officials. Here are the profiles of the top aides:

Ahmad Al-Assiri

Assiri, said to be in his 60s, was a high-ranking advisor close to the royal court and often sat in during Prince Mohammed’s closed-door meetings with visiting foreign dignitarie­s. Prior to his promotion as the deputy head of general intelligen­ce in 2017, Assiri served as the spokesman for the Saudi-led military alliance in Yemen which has been battling Houthi rebels since March 2015. Fluent in French, English and Arabic, the hard-charging official had developed a reputation for hassling journalist­s whose reports were not to his liking.

The Saudi daily Al-Hayat once described the major general, who trained at the renowned French military school Saint-Cyr, as the “best known Saudi pilot in the world”. Last year Britain apologized after an anti-war activist attempted to make a citizen’s arrest of Assiri, over Saudi Arabia’s role in the Yemen conflict, and threw an egg at him during a London visit. Before his sacking yesterday, the New York Times reported earlier this week that Saudi Arabia would assign blame for Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce on Assiri to help deflect blame from the powerful crown prince. Saud Al-Qahtani

A key counselor to Prince Mohammed, Qahtani was a media advisor in the royal court. He organized interviews with the prince for foreign journalist­s and also served as the head of the “Centre for Studies and Media Affairs”, a unit operating inside the royal court. Saudi sources say Qahtani, said to be 40years-old, steered online propaganda campaigns against the kingdom’s adversarie­s such as Qatar and Iran on social media.

With 1.3 million Twitter followers, the firebrand official was known for aggressive­ly targeting dissenters and rivals on the platform. Writing for the Washington Post earlier this year, Khashoggi alleged Qahtani maintained a “blacklist” for writers critical of the kingdom and was known to intimidate them. In an off-record interview to Newsweek magazine prior to his death-which was published yesterday-Khashoggi described Qahtani and another Saudi top official Turki al-Sheikh as “thuggish”.

“People fear them. You challenge them, you might end up in prison, and that has happened,” he was quoted as saying. He called Qahtani the “most important man in media”, saying he controlled the government’s PR activities. A known loyalist to Saudi rulers, he tweeted last year: “I don’t do anything from my own head without an order. I am an employee and executer to my king and my crown prince.”

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