The Manila Times

Crown prince pledges ‘moderate’ Saudi Arabia

- AFP

RIYADH: Powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman pledged a “moderate, open” Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, breaking with ultraconse­rvative clerics in favor of an image catering to foreign investors and Saudi youth.

The Saudi strongman, 32, did not mince words in declaring a new reality for the kingdom, hours after announcing the launch of an independen­t $500 billion megacity— with “separate regulation”— along the Red Sea coastline.

“We want to live a normal life. A life in which our religion translates to tolerance, to our traditions of kindness,” he told internatio­nal investors gathered at an economic forum in Riyadh.

“Seventy percent of the Saudi population is under 30, and honestly we will not spend the next 30 years of our lives dealing with destructiv­e ideas. We will destroy them today and at once,” the crown prince said.

One of the Saudi millennial­s in attendance was Abdul Aziz, a 27-year-old policy consultant.

He lauded the young prince for “pushing the boundaries of what’s possible” in the rigid kingdom and for using the televised speech to highlight what he sees as an abandoned legacy of moderation.

“It showed the political and social change in Saudi Arabia is not a transforma­tion. Saudi Arabia is going back to its original roots of a moderate Islam, a tolerant society,” Abdul Aziz told Agence France-Presse.

Prince Mohammed, known by his initials MBS, said he would see to it his country moved past 1979, a reference to the rise of political Islam in the years following the assassinat­ion of King Faisal in 1975.

The early 1970s had ushered major change into the oil-rich kingdom, including the introducti­on of television and schools for girls.

But that came to a halt as the Al-Sheikh family, which controls religious and social regulation in the kingdom, and the ruling Al-Saud family slowly reinforced the conservati­ve policies Riyadh is known for.

Prince Mohammed’s statement Tuesday is the most direct attack by a Saudi official on the Gulf religious circles, whose strangleho­ld on Saudi society now appears to face serious challenges.

‘Return to what was’

“We are returning to what we were before— a country of moderate Islam that is open to all religions, traditions and people around the globe,” he said.

While the Saudi government continues to draw criticism from internatio­nal rights groups, the crown prince has pushed ahead with reforms since his sudden appointmen­t on June 21.

Monitors, including Amnesty Internatio­nal, say Saudi Arabia has in parallel stepped up its repression of peaceful rights activists.

Saudi authoritie­s last month arrested more than 20 activists, including two popular Muslim preachers, without disclosing any charges against them.

But the young prince is widely regarded as being the force behind King Salman’s decision last month to lift a decades-long ban prohibitin­g women from driving.

Prince Mohammed’s comments came hours after the opening of the Future Investment Initiative, a threeday economic conference that drew some 2,500 dignitarie­s, including 2,000 foreign investors, to Riyadh.

Earlier Tuesday, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund— controlled by MBS— announced the launch of an independen­t economic zone along the kingdom’s northweste­rn coastline.

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