The National - News

Saudi crown prince’s reforms are what King Abdullah wanted, says ex-British ambassador

- JOYCE KARAM Washington

The former British ambassador to Saudi Arabia says the reforms introduced by the crown prince, Mohamed bin Salman, “are what Saudi needs” and what the late King Abdullah wanted for his country.

Sir John Jenkins, who was ambassador in Riyadh until 2015, said the British government had been urging the kingdom for 30 years to implement such reforms.

He said economic reforms and social openness in Saudi Arabia would produce more jobs and strengthen the private sector, thus diversifyi­ng the economy.

“This is not an overturnin­g of the system by MBS, it is what late King Abdullah wanted and what we are seeing is a continuity,” he said. “Saudi Arabia is more of a pluralisti­c society than people on the outside are willing to acknowledg­e. Recognisin­g this diversity helps in understand­ing the changes.”

He said social reforms, such as allowing women to drive and opening cinemas, constitute­d a reversal of the conservati­ve policies that ensued after the Mecca siege in 1979.

“This is a re-foundation of a new social contract,” he said.

Sir John also served in Iraq, Syria, Kuwait, the UAE and Libya, and is regarded as the UK’s most senior Arabist, with keen insight into the region.

He spoke to The National at a conference hosted by Policy Exchange in Washington yesterday, where he took part in a panel discussion with former US official and senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n, Tamara Cofman Wittes, on “The Islamist Challenge at Home and Abroad”.

Sir John said Islamist movements posed a great danger to stability and progress in the Middle East.

“It seemed after 1982 [Hama massacre], and the cracking down on the assassins of president Anwar Sadat, that radical Islamism had been smashed. As it turned out, it was merely incubating future and even more savage insurgenci­es,” he said.

He acknowledg­ed the part the West had played in the 1920s in helping to create flawed states that bred deep discontent. A resurgent Iran and radical Islamists have fed on that discontent ever since, Sir John said, describing different Islamist movements – from Turkey’s AKP to Lebanon’s Hizbollah to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d – as a “toxic soup of ideology”.

In 2014, he led a policy review into the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and political Islamism for the British government, but it was never made public.

 ?? AP ?? Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman’s reforms would strengthen the country’s economy, says Sir John Jenkins
AP Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman’s reforms would strengthen the country’s economy, says Sir John Jenkins

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