The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Relax and invest, Saudi prince tells investors after corruption crackdown

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RIYADH/DUBAI: Three months after Saudi Arabia detained scores of people in a crackdown on corruption, its rulers are trying to reassure investors that the kingdom remains open for business.

Foreign and local investors have long complained about corruption, and confrontin­g it is an important part of reforms unveiled by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to transform the country and reduce the economy’s reliance on oil exports.

Yet some business leaders were unsettled by the swoop on top princes, businessme­n and government officials in November because of the secrecy around the crackdown and their suspicions that it was at least partly politicall­y motivated.

“This is not a recommenda­tion for why you should invest in Saudi Arabia,” said a Western businessma­n with extensive contacts in the kingdom. “This whole thing has become one big ball of contradict­ions.”

Saudi authoritie­s are loathe to say they mishandled the anti-corruption campaign.

But top officials, including Prince Mohammed, met senior local businessme­n last month to reassure them that the crackdown was mostly over and that it was safe to do business, according to five Saudi and Western sources who spoke with people who attended the meetings. Most detainees have now been released.

In front of global political and business leaders at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss town of Davos last month, Saudi officials highlighte­d the positives of the detentions, dismissing worries about the way the crackdown was conducted but conceding that it might have been sold slightly differentl­y.

“It’s true we could make mistakes here and mistakes there. Saudi Arabia is not a perfect country. Saudi Arabia is like any other country. But the ... road to success is always under constructi­on and the whole momentum of Saudi Arabia is going toward that end,” Minister of Commerce and Investment Majid bin Abdullah al-Qasabi told a Davos session.

Government spokesmen in Riyadh did not respond to requests for comment, but Attorney General Saud al-Mojeb has described the sweep as “an independen­t judicial process” and “part of an overhaul to ensure transparen­cy, openness and good governance”.

The message delivered in the January meetings underscore­s a difficult balancing act for Prince Mohammed and his team as they try to reform the country.

They must deliver change, and one way to do that is by tackling corruption in Saudi Arabia’s opaque business world. But the judicial system is underdevel­oped and the crackdown contrasted sharply with Western-style due process.

That means each attempt at reform in the deeply conservati­ve Muslim kingdom risks exposing other shortcomin­gs.

The government has said that financial settlement­s made with the detainees in exchange for their freedom have raised more than US$100 billion, mostly in the form of land, stakes in businesses and other illiquid assets rather than cash.

That should help raise tens of billions of dollars for huge developmen­t plans, such as a US$500-billion economic zone in the northweste­rn desert.

But only a handful of specific allegation­s against those detained have been revealed.

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