The Star Malaysia

MBS orders govt reshuffle

Security, political figures being replaced over Khashoggi fallout

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s King Salman ordered a sweeping government reshuffle, replacing key security and political figures including the foreign minister, as the kingdom grapples with the internatio­nal fallout over critic Jamal Khashoggi’s murder.

The surprise shake-up saw the appointmen­t of new ministers of the powerful National Guard, informatio­n and education, as well as the head of a new space agency, but the energy and finance ministries were unaffected despite an economic downturn.

The revamp left untouched the authority of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the de facto ruler facing intense internatio­nal scrutiny over the Oct 2 murder of journalist Khashoggi, which tipped the kingdom into one of its worst crises.

Ibrahim al-Assaf, a former finance minister who was detained last year in an anti-corruption sweep, will replace Adel al-Jubeir as foreign minister, a royal decree said.

Jubeir, who sought to defend the tainted government internatio­nally after Khashoggi’s murder, was effectivel­y demoted to minister of state for foreign affairs, the decree added without explaining the change.

In other significan­t appointmen­ts, Prince Abdullah bin Bandar was named chief of the powerful National Guard, and Musaed al-Aiban, a Harvard graduate, was appointed the new national security adviser.

The reshuffle would help the crown prince further “consolidat­e power” as many of those promoted were his “key allies”, tweeted Ali Shihabi, head of the pro-Saudi think tank The Arabia Foundation.

In other changes, Turki al-Shaba- nah, an executive at broadcaste­r Rotana, was appointed as the new informatio­n minister, replacing Awwad al-Awwad – who was named as an advisor to the royal court.

Turki al-Sheikh, a close aide to the crown prince, was removed as the head of the kingdom’s sports commission and appointed entertainm­ent authority chief, while Ahmed al-Khatib was named tourism authority chief. — AFP

 ?? — AP ?? ‘Consolidat­ing power’: King Salman’s revamp of the goverrnmen­t has left the authority of his son Mohammed (left) untouched.
— AP ‘Consolidat­ing power’: King Salman’s revamp of the goverrnmen­t has left the authority of his son Mohammed (left) untouched.

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