Houston Chronicle

Saudi crown prince visits France, seeks strategic partnershi­p

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PARIS — The crown prince of Saudi Arabia arrived in Paris on Sunday, a day ahead of his first official visit to France, which is hoping to profit from his shakeup of the conservati­ve kingdom to forge a new kind of commercial relationsh­ip.

No big weapons contracts are expected to be signed during the short visit of Mohammed bin Salman, but a “strategic partnershi­p” is to be announced Tuesday with French President Emmanuel Macron.

The 32-year-old heir to the Saudi throne, now at the center of the kingdom’s power structure, has instigated major reforms to shed the kingdom’s austere image. Changes include giving women the right to drive, introducin­g concerts and promising movie theaters.

France hopes to join sectors like technology, renewable energy, health and tourism that Saudi Arabia wants to develop, an official with Macron’s office said. That includes developing a UNESCO heritage desert site.

A visit to “Station F,” a huge Left Bank incubator for startups, is on the crown prince’s agenda.

French Foreign Minister JeanYves Le Drian greeted the crown prince and his royal entourage and bevy of Cabinet ministers in a low-key arrival. The crown prince was devoting Sunday to private time ahead of the twoday official visit. The royal family owns luxurious property in France, including a mansion on the Riviera.

For human rights organizati­ons, changes being wrought by the crown prince, often referred to as MBS, are cosmetic.

Demonstrat­ors planned protests over the Saudi-led coalition’s airstrikes in Yemen to fight Iran-backed Houthi rebels. Ten human rights organizati­ons have asked Macron to demand that Saudi Arabia end the airstrikes and lift a blockade aggravatin­g the humanitari­an crisis in Yemen.

Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth advised the French president in a tweet Sunday to “keep his distance — from MBS’s war crimes in Yemen and his ongoing repression of women and dissidents at home.”

The two leaders will discuss the wars in Yemen and Syria, Iran — Saudi Arabia’s regional rival — and the fight against terrorism and terrorist financing, the French official said.

Salman comes to France after a nearly three-week-long trip to the U.S., which ended in Houston, preceded by a three-day visit to Britain. The prince ended his U.S. travels with more than $2.3 billion in promised arms sales and $1.3 billion in artillery.

France, traditiona­lly a major arms supplier of the Saudis, dismissed questions about big arms contracts during this trip.

“We are absolutely not disappoint­ed” in the absence of weapons deals, the official from Macron’s office insisted. “We want to be part of this new dimension” being developed by the crown prince, which gives way to “new cooperatio­n, less directed toward isolated contracts and more to investment­s in the future.”

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