The Daily Telegraph

Saudi crown prince was held at palace until he surrendere­d his claim to throne

- By Raf Sanchez MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

DETAILS have emerged of last month’s “palace coup” in Saudi Arabia which saw the king’s 31-year-old son depose his cousin to become heir to the throne.

Mohammed bin Nayef, the former crown prince, was reportedly held in a room in a royal palace in Mecca and told he could not leave until he surrendere­d his powers to his younger cousin, Mohammed bin Salman. As part of the mid- night plot, The New York Times reported that senior Saudi princes were told in a secret briefing that the 57-year-old bin Nayef ’s alleged addiction to painkiller­s rendered him unfit to become king.

The Saudi government has been at pains to show there are no hard feelings between the deposed bin Nayef and his younger cousin, but the new account of the royal manoeuvrin­gs shows the transition was less amicable than presented. Bin Nayef was reportedly summoned to the Safa Palace on the evening of June 20 for what he thought was a regular meeting with King Salman bin Abdulaziz. Instead, he was reportedly taken into a side room and stripped of his mobile phone by royal officials, who told him he needed to give up his role as crown prince and relinquish the powerful role of interior minister. Bin Nayaf initially refused, according to the newspaper, but as the night dragged on towards sunrise he eventually gave in.

In 2009, bin Nayef narrowly survived an al-qaeda assassinat­ion attempt. It has been rumoured that he began taking painkiller­s after the attack, and became addicted. Bin Nayef has not commented publicly on these claims.

Bin Nayef was also reportedly opposed to the Saudi-led diplomatic campaign against its neighbour, Qatar, which may have hastened his demotion. Saudi and its three allies said yesterday that they were no longer insisting Qatar meet a list of 13 demands, including closing the al-jazeera TV network. A senior Saudi official yesterday said the account of bin Nayef ’s demotion was “unfounded and untrue, in addition to being nonsense”. The official said bin Nayef had been removed from his post in the national interest and had not experience­d any “pressure or disrespect”. ♦sa♦di police have released without charge a woman who was arrested after being filmed wearing a miniskirt and crop top in one of the kingdom’s most conservati­ve provinces.

 ??  ?? Saudi princes were secretly briefed on Mohammed bin Nayef’s alleged addiction to painkiller­s
Saudi princes were secretly briefed on Mohammed bin Nayef’s alleged addiction to painkiller­s

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