Dayton Daily News

Four Saudi princes ensnared as wave of detentions grows

- David D. Kirkpatric­k and Ben Hubbard

At least four Saudi princes have been ensnared in a wave of detentions ordered by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a person close to the royal family said Saturday.

Prince Nayef bin Ahmed, who held senior positions in the military, was detained on Friday along with at least three other senior members of the royal family. The full extent of the roundup remains unclear.

Analysts who follow the royal family said Saturday that the latest wave of arrests raised questions about whether Crown Prince Mohammed would soon seek to take formal power from his aging father, King Salman, 84.

Others suggested that the crown prince, who has establishe­d himself as the de facto ruler of the kingdom in the name of his father, was worried about discontent within the royal family as plummeting oil prices strained the country’s budget and economy. They say he may have ordered the roundup in part because he feared a challenge to his power.

Prince Nayef has held positions in the interior ministry and military and once headed army intelligen­ce, according to a Saudi military website. But he did not appear to have any position in the government at the time of his detention.

He was detained together with his father, Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, who is the last surviving full brother of the king.

Crown Prince Mohammed, 34, has establishe­d a track record of bold and ruthless moves with few precedents in the modern history of the kingdom. He has led a fiveyear military interventi­on in Yemen that has created one of the world’s worst humanitari­an disasters without any sign of victory.

He also has cracked down on the privilege and clout of his own sprawling royal family in order to tighten his own grip on the kingdom, including by detaining hundreds of wealthy princes and businessme­n in a Ritz-Carlton hotel that he repurposed as a prison. He demanded that they turn over large sums of their wealth as part of what he portrayed as a crackdown on corruption.

Outside Saudi Arabia, the prince is best known for his associatio­n with the killing of Jamal Khashoggi, a dissident and newspaper columnist, by Saudi agents in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018.

But even for Crown Prince Mohammed, the detention of his uncle, Prince Ahmed, startled many analysts.

“It is surprising he would move on Prince Ahmed with the king’s authority still there,” said Kristin Smith Diwan, a scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

The recent wave of arrests has sent tremors of fear through the family and raised questions about the status of the king. The king was photograph­ed in recent days meeting with the visiting British foreign secretary. A doctor with ties to the Saudi hospital that treats many royals said the hospital had received no word that the king was ill.

Prince Ahmed had appeared for a short time in the fall of 2018 to be a potential rival to the crown prince.

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