Gulf News

Crown Prince defends Saudi anti-graft drive

Mohammad Bin Salman calls Khamenei ‘new Hitler of Middle East’

- BY THOMAS FRIEDMAN

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman has defended an anti-corruption probe he has spearheade­d across the country which saw the arrests of around 200 Saudi businessme­n including members of the royal family.

According to estimates around $100 billion has been siphoned off amid corrupt practices, he told the New York Times.

“My father saw that there is no way we can grow with this level of corruption. In 2015, one of his first orders to his team was to collect all informatio­n about corruption at the top.”

The majority of the royal family supports his anti-corruption drive, he said.

Meanwhile, Crown Prince Mohammad issued a stark warning over Iran’s expansioni­sm. Calling the Iranian Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, “the new Hitler of the Middle East” he warned:

“We learnt from Europe that appeasemen­t doesn’t work. We don’t want the new Hitler in Iran to repeat what happened in Europe in the Middle East.”

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, in a candid interview with the New York Times, has defended an anti-corruption probe he has spearheade­d across the country which has drawn much praise but also some criticisms.

While some say the campaign was merely a power grab—Mohammad flatly rejects this.

Instead, he said that a “majority of the royal family” is already behind him and have publicly pledged allegiance to him and his reforms.

“Our country has suffered a lot from corruption from the 1980s until today. The calculatio­n of our experts is that roughly 10 per cent of all government spending was siphoned off by corruption each year, from the top levels to the bottom. Over the years the government launched more than one ‘war on corruption’ and they all failed. Why? Because they all started from the bottom up.”

So when his father, who has never been tainted by corruption charges during his nearly five decades as governor of Riyadh, ascended to the throne in 2015 (at a time of falling oil prices), he vowed to put a stop to it all, Mohammad said:

“My father saw that there is no way we can stay in the G-20 and grow with this level of corruption. In early 2015, one of his first orders to his team was to collect all the informatio­n about corruption - at the top. This team worked for two years until they collected the most accurate informatio­n, and then they came up with about 200 names.”

When all the data was ready, the public prosecutor, Saud Al Mojib, took action, Mohammad said, explaining that each suspected billionair­e or prince was arrested and given two choices: “We show them all the files that we have and as soon as they see those about 95 per cent agree to a settlement,” which means signing over cash or shares of their business to the Saudi state treasury.

“About 1 per cent,” he added, “are able to prove they are clean and their case is dropped right there. About 4 per cent say they are not corrupt and with their lawyers want to go to court. Under Saudi law, the public prosecutor is independen­t. We cannot interfere with his job the king can dismiss him, but he is driving the process. We have experts making sure no businesses are bankrupted in the process.”

On how much money the government is recovering, Mohammad estimates the figure to be “around $100 billion”.

There is no way, he added, to root out all corruption from top to the bottom, “So you have to send a signal, and the signal going forward now is, ‘You will not escape.’

The anti-corruption drive is only the second-most important initiative launched by Mohammad. The first is to bring Saudi Islam back to its more open and modern orientatio­n - whence it diverted in 1979. That is, back to what Mohammad described as a “moderate, balanced Islam that is open to the world and to all religions and all traditions and peoples.”

Mohammad insisted that the drive was to restore Islam to its origins—not reinterpre­t its tenets.

During the Prophet’s time, he argued, there were musical theaters, there was mixing between men and women, there was respect for Christians and Jews in Arabia.

“The first commercial judge in Madinah was a woman!” So if the Prophet embraced all of this, Mohammad asked, “Does that mean the Prophet was not a Muslim?”

Pictures and YouTube videos of Saudi Arabia in the 1950s show women without heads covered, wearing skirts and walking with men in public, as well as concerts and cinemas. It was still a traditiona­l and modest place, but not one where fun had been outlawed, which is what happened after 1979.

“My generation was held hostage by 1979. I know now that my kids will not be hostages,” one middle-age Saudi banker said.

 ?? AP ?? Prince Mohammad Bin Salman
AP Prince Mohammad Bin Salman

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