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Saudi king ousts nephew, names 31-year-old son as crown prince

- AFP

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia’s King Salman ousted his nephew as crown prince on Wednesday and installed his son Mohammed bin Salman, capping a meteoric rise for the 31-year-old that puts him one step from the throne.

The young prince already wielded huge power before he was named heir, spearheadi­ng a sweeping economic and social reform program for the ultraconse­rvative kingdom.

His rise comes at a crucial time for Saudi Arabia as it is locked in a battle for regional influence with arch rival Iran, bogged down in a controvers­ial military interventi­on in neighborin­g Yemen and at loggerhead­s with fellow US Gulf ally Qatar.

His youth is a novelty for a country that is used to ageing leaders — his father is 81 — and his rapid ascent through royal ranks over the past two years has symbolized the hopes of the kingdom’s young population, more than half of which is under 25.

Footage aired on Saudi television channels showed the bearded Mohammed bin Salman kissing the hand of his ousted cousin Mohammed bin Nayef and kneeling in front of the older prince, who patted his shoulder to congratula­te him.

“I am going to rest now. May God help you,” the former crown prince said, to which his replacemen­t replied: “May God help you. I will never do without your advice.”

As deputy crown prince, the new heir to the throne already held multiple posts, including the defense portfolio and economic supervisor­y positions.

He is the main champion of the kingdom’s Vision 2030 reform plan which aims to bring social and economic change to the oil-dependent economy of a country where women’s rights are among the most restricted in the world.

Mohammed chairs the Council of Economic and Developmen­t Affairs which coordinate­s economic policy and oversees state oil giant Saudi Aramco.

‘CALLING THE SHOTS’

As defense minister, Mohammed holds overall responsibi­lity for the kingdom’s military interventi­on in Yemen, but analysts say he has for months retreated from more hands-on involvemen­t, which he leaves to his generals.

Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia leads a coalition which has fought alongside the Yemeni government against Shiite rebels who control the capital Sanaa.

It has provided ground troops, enforced an air and sea blockade, and conducted a bombing campaign that has drawn repeated criticism from human rights groups for the high number of civilian casualties.

Saudi Arabia’s interventi­on in Yemen in March 2015 signaled a more aggressive foreign policy, emphasized again this month when the kingdom and its allies imposed an embargo on neighborin­g Qatar.

They accused Doha of supporting extremists, a charge it denies.

The rift marked the region’s worst diplomatic crisis in years and drew some concern in Washington but Riyadh has remained unapologet­ic.

The move reflects Mohammed’s “calling the shots” in the kingdom, said Andreas Krieg of the Defense Studies Department at King’s College London.

A visit to Saudi Arabia by US President Donald J. Trump in May, when he held talks with the then deputy crown prince, signaled that Mohammed “could be more confrontat­ional,” Krieg said.

PUBLIC PROFILE

His appointmen­t as heir to the throne completes a gradual stripping of power from the ousted crown prince, Mohammed bin Nayef, 57, who has also been fired as deputy prime minister and interior minister.

After taking on senior government posts two years ago, the hard-charging Mohammed bin Salman’s public profile rapidly eclipsed that of the then-crown prince, a sharp break with the past when ageing leaders dominated the kingdom’s politics.

An April government and security shakeup prepared the way for Mohammed bin Salman’s rise, with a number of his allies appointed to prominent positions and a brother named ambassador to Washington.

Salman had already set a precedent for removal of a crown prince when, in April 2015, he appointed Mohammed bin Nayef and fired Prince Moqren bin Abdul Aziz bin Saud, an appointee of the late King Abdullah.

The move left Mohammed bin Nayef as the first of the second generation, or grandsons of the kingdom’s founder, Abdul Aziz bin Saud, in line to lead the Islamic kingdom.

With Mohammed bin Salman now poised for the throne, an even younger generation is set for power.

In a letter to the king, Mohammed bin Nayef endorsed his decision, a Saudi official told AFP.

Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Nayef — the ousted interior minister’s nephew — was named to replace him.

He takes control of the security forces at a time when the kingdom has been hit by periodic shooting and bombing attacks claimed by the Islamic State group and faces persistent unrest among its Shiite majority.

 ?? REUTERS ?? SAUDI ARABIA’S DEPUTY Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman reacts upon his arrival at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, June 24, 2015.
REUTERS SAUDI ARABIA’S DEPUTY Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman reacts upon his arrival at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, June 24, 2015.

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