The Borneo Post

Saudi private jet industry stalls after corruption crackdown

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DUBAI: A crackdown on corruption in Saudi Arabia has severely dented the kingdom’s private jet industry in a sign of the impact the campaign has had on private enterprise and the wealthy elite.

Dozens of planes, owned by individual­s and charter companies and worth hundreds of millions of dollars, are stranded at airports across the kingdom including Riyadh and Jeddah, four people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Some were handed over to the state in settlement­s reached after the crackdown was launched in late 2017, when dozens of princes, businessme­n and government officials were detained, they said.

Others belong to Saudis who either face travel bans or are reluctant to fly the planes because they are wary of displays of wealth that might be seen as taunting the government over the anticorrup­tion campaign, two of the sources said.

The government media office did not respond to requests for comment. The General Authority of Civil Aviation said questions on the impact of the anti-corruption drive on the private jet industry were outside its mandate, adding that its relationsh­ip with private aviation covers operations, safety and regulation­s.

The crackdown’s impact on the business community and private enterprise, which are already reeling from low oil prices and weakened consumer confidence, has shattered investor confidence and contribute­d to a sense of uncertaint­y around the policies of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The idle aircraft, which one of the sources estimated at up to about 70, include Bombardier and Gulfstream jets, the sources said. There are also larger Airbus and Boeing aircraft that are more commonly associated with commercial airlines but are often used in the Middle East as private jets.

A Boeing 737 MAX or Airbus A320neo can cost up to US$130 million, though the final cost depends on how the jet is fitted out with technology and amenities, including private bedrooms, meeting rooms, and even gym equipment.

The number of registered private jets in Saudi Arabia stood at 129 as of December 2018 compared with 136 a year earlier, according to FlightAsce­nd Consultanc­y data.

Private jets offer users flexibilit­y as, unlike commercial airliners, they are not constraine­d by arrival and departure time slots. They also enable users to travel more discreetly.

Under the radar

Saudi Arabia’s finance minister, Mohammed al- Jadaan, said last month the state had collected more than 50 billion riyals ( US$ 13.33 billion) from settlement­s reached under the crackdown.

Most of the detainees held at Riyadh’s Ritz-Carlton Hotel in November 2017 were released after being exonerated or reaching financial settlement­s with the government, which said it aims to seize more than US$100 billion in total in either cash or assets.

It is unclear how the government would transfer ownership of the jets grounded across Saudi Arabia as many are owned through offshore firms or are mortgaged, two of the sources familiar with the matter said.

Three of the sources said it was likely that the jets were still registered in the kingdom.

Two of the sources said the government could absorb the aircraft into existing fleets used by ministries and state-owned corporatio­ns. A third source said the government had been looking to set up its own private jet company made up entirely of seized aircraft.

The anti-corruption campaign launched by Prince Mohammed has won widespread approval among ordinary Saudis, partly because the government has said it will use some of the funds to finance social benefits.

Critics have said the purge was a power play by the prince as he moved to consolidat­e power in his hands.

There have been few private jet flights in Saudi Arabia over the past year, largely because there are fewer planes readily available, including for charter, three of the sources familiar with the matter said.

VistaJet Chief Commercial Officer Ian Moore compared it to the situation in China where an anti- corruption crackdown has also weakened the private jet market.

“It’s not really politicall­y great to be seen flying privately at the moment, particular­ly owning your own aircraft,” he told Reuters.

Some wealthy Saudi elite are taking commercial airlines to the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and other destinatio­ns and then chartering private jets to avoid government scrutiny, two of the sources said.

Plane manufactur­ers said the appetite for business jet sales in Saudi Arabia has dropped since the anti-corruption crackdown was launched in November 2017.

“Political instabilit­y does not help consumer confidence in any way, shape or form,” Embraer Executive Jets Chief Commercial Officer Stephen Friedrich told Reuters. — Reuters

It’s not really politicall­y great to be seen flying privately at the moment, particular­ly owning your own aircraft.

Ian Moor, VistaJet Chief Commercial Officer

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? It is unclear how the government would transfer ownership of the jets grounded across Saudi Arabia as many are owned through offshore firms or are mortgaged.
— Reuters photo It is unclear how the government would transfer ownership of the jets grounded across Saudi Arabia as many are owned through offshore firms or are mortgaged.
 ??  ?? Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed Salman attends a graduation ceremony for the 95th batch of cadets from the King Faisal Air Academy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. — Reuters photo
Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed Salman attends a graduation ceremony for the 95th batch of cadets from the King Faisal Air Academy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. — Reuters photo

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