The Daily Telegraph

Saudi prince pledges to help UK thwart terror

On the eve of the Crown Prince’s visit, Con Coughlin, in Riyadh, finds a leader seeking common ground

- By Con Coughlin in Riyadh

SAUDI ARABIA will help keep Britain safe with extensive sharing of intelligen­ce on terrorists, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has told The Daily Telegraph.

In an exclusive interview ahead of his visit to Britain this week, the heir to the Saudi throne, who now in effect runs the country on a day-to-day basis, said he believed that close cooperatio­n between Riyadh and the UK’S intelligen­ce agencies would help prevent further jihadist attacks.

“We want to fight terrorism and we want to fight extremism because we need to build stability in the Middle East,” he said. “The British and Saudi people, along with the rest of the world, will be much safer if you have a strong relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia.”

Speaking at his residence just outside the capital, Crown Prince Mohammed said his ambition to promote a more moderate Islamic outlook in his own country could also play a prominent role in defeating Islamist-inspired extremism.

The 32-year-old Crown Prince is due to have private meetings with the heads of MI5 and MI6, and has been invited to attend a meeting of the National Security Council, a rare honour for a visiting foreign dignitary.

Boris Johnson, the Foreign Secretary, last week highlighte­d the importance of defence cooperatio­n between the two countries to counter Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) militants and as a diplomatic counterwei­ght to Iran’s Middle East influence.

“The extremists and the terrorists are linked through spreading their agenda,” the Crown Prince said. “We need to work together to promote moderate Islam.”

Announcing a series of reforms last year, he acknowledg­ed that the ultraconse­rvative kingdom had been “not normal”, blaming strict religious doctrines that have governed society for decades.

However, his three-day visit to this country, where he is to meet Theresa May, will be one of the most sensitive diplomatic visits this year, as the Prime Minister is expected to raise concerns over the humanitari­an situation in Yemen.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud, the Saudi royal charged with undertakin­g the most radical reform agenda in his country’s history, is the epitome of a human dynamo.

Not content with transformi­ng Saudi Arabia’s long-standing dependence on its vast oil wealth, the Crown Prince is simultaneo­usly embarking on an overhaul of the country’s social norms.

And, as the 32-year-old Crown Prince Mohammed, or MBS as he is known, prepares to make his first official visit to Britain tomorrow he is enthusiast­ic about the wide-ranging impact that Vision 2030, his ambitious programme to restructur­e the country’s economy, will have on its future direction.

In an exclusive interview with The

Daily Telegraph, the Crown Prince said he hoped British businesses would be able to benefit from the profound changes taking place in his country after the Brexit negotiatio­ns are complete.

“We believe that Saudi Arabia needs to be part of the global economy,” he explained. “People need to be able to move freely, and we need to apply the same standards as the rest of the world. After Brexit there will be huge opportunit­ies for Britain as a result of Vision 2030.”

Crown Prince Mohammed, looking relaxed in a long, flowing brown Arabian robe, was speaking at his palatial residence in the exclusive suburb of Irqah to the west of Riyadh.

Previously when I have met the Crown Prince he has spoken mainly in Arabic. But in a sign of the heirappare­nt’s growing confidence, on this occasion he chose to answer my questions in English.

“The relationsh­ip between Saudi Arabia and Britain is historic and goes back to the foundation of the Kingdom,” he said. “We have a common interest that goes back to the earliest days of the relationsh­ip. Our relationsh­ip with Britain today is super.”

During his three-day visit to Britain, he will meet Theresa May and other senior ministers, as well as meeting members of the Royal family.

The Crown Prince, who was appointed last June to his new position by his father, King Salman, the Saudi ruler, has been given the daunting task of driving through a wide-ranging package of reforms designed to address the needs and aspiration­s of Saudi’s restless, and predominan­tly young population.

The constant mantra you hear in Riyadh these days is that 70 per cent of the country’s 30million population is under the age of 30 and, with many of them having received their education in Western countries such as Britain and the US, are anxious for change.

To this end he has already implemente­d a number of reforms aimed at making the country more socially liberal and gradually easing restrictio­ns on women’s rights.

Apart from being allowed to drive from June, women will now be allowed to run their own businesses and attend football matches, while young couples will be allowed to enjoy simple pleasures such as going to the cinema together.

“People in Saudi Arabia have changed a lot because they travel to countries like Britain and see a different way of life,” he explained.

The seismic social changes were certainly in evidence during my visit to interview the Crown Prince. In the 30 or so years I have been visiting and writing about Saudi Arabia, I was familiar with the conservati­ve Islamic code that governs all aspects of social life, in particular the rigorously enforced ban on unmarried men and women mingling in public places.

The ruling House of Saud takes seriously its responsibi­lity as the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, at Mecca and Medina, and the feared Mutawa, or religious police, were always on hand to punish and detain wrongdoers. Imagine my surprise, then, when walking through a park in central Riyadh, I found groups of young Saudi men and women socialisin­g without a chaperone in sight at an open-air barbecue while listening to Western pop music blaring out from nearby speakers.

As one diplomat explained, the social transforma­tion taking place in Saudi goes hand in hand with the economic Vision 2030 programme for the country. “They are inextricab­ly linked,” the diplomat said. “If anything, the economic reforms are driving the social reforms.”

These changes have certainly gained the approval of British ministers. Boris Johnson, the Foreign Secretary, argues that critics do not understand properly the changes that are taking place in the country, saying that the Saudi government is now making “exactly the kind of reforms that we have always advocated”.

But there will also be a hard-nosed business dimension to the Crown Prince’s visit to London this week as he seeks to sell the Vision 2030 programme to British heads of industry. One of the key linchpins of the Vision 2030 agenda, whereby the Saudis plan to diversify their economy away from its traditiona­l dependence of oil, is to raise funds on the internatio­nal markets by selling a stake in the state-owned oil company Saudi Aramco, which financial experts believe could raise around $100billion (£72.3 billion) for the kingdom.

The London Stock Exchange is making a strong bid to handle the float, although it is facing stiff competitio­n from other bidders, in particular New York.

Saudi officials say no decision will be announced during Crown Prince Mohammed’s visit this week. But there are growing hopes that, if the visit goes well, it will enhance London’s prospects, as well as strengthen­ing Uk-saudi trade ties.

British diplomats point out that UK trade with Saudi and other Gulf states stands at about 10 per cent of total commercial transactio­ns – more than the total amount of trade with China. This figure could grow dramatical­ly if British firms and businesses take full advantage of the benefits that could be afforded by Vision 2030.

Another important dimension to Crown Prince Mohammed’s visit, of course, will relate to cooperatio­n on defence and intelligen­ce issues, one of the enduring mainstays of the Uk-saudi relationsh­ip.

The Crown Prince is due to have private meetings with the heads of MI5 and MI6, as well as being invited to attend a meeting of the National Security Council – a rare privilege for a visiting foreign dignitary.

“The British and Saudi people, along with the rest of the world, will be much safer if you have a strong relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia,” he said.

Crown Prince Mohammed believes that, by promoting a more moderate Islamic outlook in his own country, Saudi Arabia can play a prominent role in defeating Islamist-inspired extremism.

“The extremists and the terrorists are linked through spreading their agenda,” he said. “We need to work together to promote moderate Islam.”

He also believes economic growth in Saudi Arabia will benefit the rest of the region, thereby helping to defeat extremism. “We want to fight terrorism, and we want to fight extremism because we need to build stability in the Middle East,” he said. “We want economic growth that will help the region to develop.

“Because of our dominant position, Saudi Arabia is the key to the economic success of the region.”

While Crown Prince Mohammed has won plaudits for his ambitious approach to driving through his reform agenda, he is not without his critics, who accuse him of being naive and trying to do too much too soon.

Last year around 380 members of the royal family were detained in an anti-corruption purge.

The Crown Prince also replaced the head of the country’s armed forces, a move said to have been taken in response to criticisms over the Saudi coalition’s performanc­e in Yemen’s civil war, which has turned into a humanitari­an catastroph­e.

The Saudi government’s controvers­ial approach to dealing with rival regimes, such as Iran and Qatar, have raised concerns that it might provoke a new regional conflict. The Crown Prince was dismissive of such claims, and said he was working closely with the British government to resolve these issues.

“Britain is very supportive of our concerns regarding Iran and other regional security issues. It is always trying to help us and to fix things when there are issues.”

The Crown Prince concedes, though, that his country needs to do more to improve its human rights record, but asks critics to be patient. “We do not have the best human rights record in the world,” he said, “but we are getting better, and we have come a long way in a short time.”

‘People in Saudi Arabia have changed a lot because they travel to countries like Britain and see a different way of life’

‘We do not have the best human rights record in the world, but we are getting better, and we have come a long way in a short time’

 ??  ?? Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will make his first official visit to Britain tomorrow, and will meet Theresa May, senior ministers and members of the Royal family during his three-day trip
Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will make his first official visit to Britain tomorrow, and will meet Theresa May, senior ministers and members of the Royal family during his three-day trip
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom