New Straits Times

Saudi govt issues drone limit following palace incident

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Interior Ministry yesterday instructed drone enthusiast­s to obtain permission to fly the devices until regulation­s were finalised, a day after security forces shot down a recreation­al drone near the king’s palace here.

Amateur online videos of heavy gunfire in the capital’s Khozama district on Saturday sparked fears of possible political unrest in the world’s top oil exporter.

A senior Saudi official said there were no casualties when the drone was shot down and that King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud was not in the palace at the time.

A security screening point had noticed the flying of a small unauthoris­ed recreation­al drone, leading security forces to deal with it “according to their orders and instructio­ns”, state news agency SPA had said.

An Interior Ministry spokesman said a law for the use of drones was in its final stage and called on users to obtain the necessary police clearance to use the devices “for particular reasons in permitted locations”, state news agency SPA reported.

Saudi Arabia had witnessed a series of radical political changes over the past year under the king’s son, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who had spearheade­d reforms to transform the economy and open the country culturally.

The 32-year-old leader ousted his older cousin as crown prince last summer in a palace coup and then jailed senior royals as part of an anti-corruption sweep. Prominent clerics have also been detained in an apparent bid to silence dissent.

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