The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Saudi Arabia releases two princes after graft probe

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia has released two sons of late king Abdullah two months after they were detained in a sweeping anticorrup­tion purge, a source close to the government said Friday.

“They have been released,” the source said a day after a family member posted photos of Prince Faisal Abdullah, a former head of the Saudi Red Crescent, and Prince Mashal Abdullah, a previous governor of Mecca, on Twitter.

Prince Turki Abdullah was the only brother left in detention, the source said, without adding if his brothers had reached a cash settlement to be released.

Another brother, influentia­l Prince Miteb Abdullah, was freed in late November after three weeks in detention following a ‘settlement’ with authoritie­s reportedly exceeding US$1 billion.

At the time, the former National Guard chief was seen as the most high-ranking royal to be released.

The four brothers were among more than 200 princes, ministers and businessme­n rounded up earlier that month, as Crown Prince Mohammed Salman tightened his grip on power.

Most of those detained have struck monetary settlement­s in exchange for their freedom, the attorney general said this month.

Other high-profile targets of the crackdown include billionair­e Prince Al-Waleed Talal, dubbed the Warren Buffett of Saudi Arabia.

Many of the detainees have been held at Riyadh’s Ritz-Carlton hotel, which has been turned into a luxury prison.

Saudi authoritie­s insist the purge was meant solely to target endemic corruption as the kingdom seeks to diversify its oildepende­nt economy.

The attorney-general has previously said he estimates at least US$100 billion has been lost in embezzleme­nt or corruption over several decades. — AFP

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