Arab Times

Billionair­e Saudi bank tycoon dead at 79

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RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, May 19, (AP): Billionair­e Saudi businessma­n Saleh Abdullah Kamel, who founded the banking and real estate conglomera­te Dallah Albaraka Group, has died, according to relatives quoted in the kingdom’s media. He was 79.

People close to Kamel told The Associated Press he died at the Dr. Samir Abbas Hospital in the city of Jeddah, where he was taken after suffering a heart attack early on Tuesday.

Kamel’s business empire grew from its humble beginnings in the late 1960s - at the same time that the kingdom was using its oil wealth to rapidly develop and in need of homegrown companies to build roads, highways and cities.

Over the years, the business expanded to tens of thousands of employees and today includes subsidiari­es and stakes in a range of businesses, such as the operation and maintenanc­e of airports and roads, tourism, trade, trucking and transporta­tion, telecommun­ications, media, agricultur­e, poultry and health care.

Kamel’s son and the CEO of Dallah Albaraka Group, Abdullah Kamel, was quoted in the state-linked Okaz newspaper that he oversees as saying that funeral prayers will be held Tuesday afternoon in Makkaha’s Grand Mosque, which has been closed to visitors amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The fact that his funeral prayers are being permitted at the mosque, which is home to Islam’s holiest site, reflects Kamel’s prominence and stature in Saudi Arabia.

Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya TV network said Kamel, who was born in Makkah but based in Jeddah, was instrument­al in helping build many of the kingdom’s ports and major projects.

He served on numerous boards and was the chairman of the General Council for Islamic Banks and the Jiddah Chamber of Commerce. He once owned a significan­t stake in Saudi broadcaste­r MBC, which owns and operates Al-Arabiya.

Al-Arabiya dubbed him “the father of contempora­ry Islamic finance”.

His life, however, was not without controvers­y. Following the 9/11 attacks, he and other prominent Saudi businessme­n and princes were sued on charges of financing the attacks. The lawsuits were dismissed by the U.S. District Court of New York in 2005.

The Wall Street Journal had reported at the time that U.S. intelligen­ce and counterter­rorism officials had informatio­n linking the Dallah Albaraka Group to transactio­ns by suspected al-Qaida members. However U.S. officials gave no indication that Kamel or his son, Abdullah, knowingly aided alQaida or other militant groups.

Kamel was also reportedly swept up in Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s anti-corruption purge in 2017. The unpreceden­ted Saudi crackdown saw the country’s top princes and businessme­n detained at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh, with many forced to sign over billions of dollars in assets. The sweep, which was conducted largely in secret behind closed doors, helped the young crown prince consolidat­e power and was widely criticized by internatio­nal rights groups.

Across Muslim countries and at home, Kamel was heavily involved in philanthro­py and charity.

A multi-million dollar donation in 2010 establishe­d the Abdallah S. Kamel Center for the Study of Islamic Law and Civilizati­on at Yale Law School in the U.S.

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