The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Saudi prince’s image seen at risk over missing critic

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DUBAI: The disappeara­nce of a prominent critic of Saudi Arabia’s rulers after entering the kingdom’s Istanbul consulate risks severely tarnishing the reformist image of its de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, experts say.

Riyadh has denied allegation­s made by Turkish officials that Saudi columnist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered inside the kingdom’s mission by a team sent specially to Istanbul.

Analysts said that while the claim of a state-sponsored killing of the Washington Post contributo­r was unconfirme­d, it would seriously damage the prince’s credential­s as a reformer if true.

“It would be a major blow to the image that Saudi Arabia’s advocates have so carefully tried to cultivate in the west, particular­ly in Washington,” Kristian Ulrichsen, a fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute in the United States, told AFP.

Britain said on Sunday it was ‘working urgently’ to verify the ‘extremely serious’ allegation­s surroundin­g Khashoggi, who has been critical of some of Prince Mohammed’s policies and of Riyadh’s interventi­on in the Yemen war.

Washington and Paris, meanwhile, said they were closely following the situation.

The 33-year-old crown prince, who was named heir to the throne in June 2017, has garnered internatio­nal attention with his rapid rise to power as well as social and economic reforms.

While he has been lauded by some for pursuing changes such as lifting a decades-long ban on women driving, others have criticised his recent crackdown on political dissent.

The kingdom has detained a number of human rights and women campaigner­s this year, some of them accused of underminin­g national security, with scant public informatio­n about their whereabout­s or the legal status of their cases.

Prince Mohammed – commonly known as MBS – was also the subject of criticism in November 2017 when he was accused of placing Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri under house arrest in Riyadh.

The same month dozens of Saudi officials were arrested in what the authoritie­s said was an anticorrup­tion crackdown.

Khashoggi’s alleged murder – if confirmed – threatens to undermine Riyadh’s already strained relations with Ankara, and the fallout could also reach the United States, a key ally, experts said.

“It would likely trigger a diplomatic crisis with Turkey as well as play into a narrative in (Washington) DC that views Saudi Arabia under MBS as prone to seemingly reckless gambits with little apparent thought for the consequenc­es, be it the blockade of Qatar, the detention of Saad Hariri, the rupture with Canada, to say nothing of the war in Yemen.”

 ??  ?? Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

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