Yahoo – AFP,
Ian Timberlake, June 21, 2017
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| Saudi King Salman has ousted his nephew as crown prince and installed his son Mohammed bin Salman (pictured) (AFP Photo/FAYEZ NURELDINE) |
Riyadh
(AFP) - Saudi Arabia's King Salman ousted his nephew as crown prince on
Wednesday and installed his son Mohammed bin Salman, capping a meteoric rise
for the 31-year-old that puts him one step from the throne.
The young
prince already wielded huge power before he became heir, spearheading a
sweeping economic and social reform programme for the ultraconservative
kingdom.
His rise
comes at a crucial time for Saudi Arabia which is in a battle for regional
influence with arch-rival Iran, bogged down in a controversial military
intervention in neighbouring Yemen and at loggerheads with fellow US Gulf ally
Qatar.
Prince
Mohammed is now "de factor ruler of the kingdom," said Andreas Krieg
of the Defence Studies Department at King's College London.
"The
king needed to strengthen his son's position amid the current turmoil in the
region," Krieg said.
Mohammed's
youth is a novelty for a country that is used to ageing leaders -- King Salman
is 81 and his predecessor King Abdullah died in 2015 aged around 90.
His rapid
ascent over the past two years has symbolised the hopes of the kingdom's young
population, more than half of which is under 25.
Saudi
television channels showed the bearded Mohammed bin Salman kissing the hand of
his ousted cousin Mohammed bin Nayef and kneeling in front of the older prince,
who patted his shoulder to congratulate him.
"I am
going to rest now. May God help you," the former crown prince said, to
which his replacement replied: "May God help you. I will never do without
your advice."
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Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Nayef was politically "getting weaker,
more
marginalised", after continuous chipping away at his powers and
influence,
according to a foreign diplomat (AFP Photo)
|
Stocks
rise
The king
called on governors and other princes to pledge allegiance to his new heir and
ordered a ceremony -- routine on such occasions -- after night prayers on
Wednesday at a royal palace in Mecca.
Many
ordinary citizens tweeted their allegiance, but support for Mohammed has not
been unanimous.
A royal
order said his appointment was endorsed by 31 of 34 members on the Council of
Allegiance, which decides on succession issues.
The king
accompanied his son's elevation with measures to woo the many Saudis who work
for the government, either as civilian or military personnel.
The
enticements come as the kingdom's war in Yemen drags on and citizens for the
first time pay taxes, imposed after oil prices fell.
Salman
ordered the reinstatement of all civil service benefits cut in a controversial
move as part of an austerity package late last year.
He also
extended the end-of-Ramadan Eid Al-Fitr holidays until July 9 for civil
servants.
As deputy
crown prince, the new heir to the throne already held multiple posts.
He is the
main champion of the kingdom's Vision 2030 reform plan to bring social and
economic change to the oil-dependent economy of a country where women's rights
are among the most restricted in the world.
One Saudi,
Sultan al-Asimi, 33, said in Mecca that Mohammed's appointment sends a message
of "hope and trust about the future of the country".
The Saudi
stock market seemed to agree. It closed 5.5 percent higher on news of
Mohammed's appointment as well as word that the exchange had moved closer to
joining a major global index.
Mohammed is
also defence minister with overall responsibility for the kingdom's military
intervention in Yemen.
Sunni-dominated
Saudi Arabia leads a coalition supporting the Yemeni government against Shiite
rebels who control the capital Sanaa.
The
coalition's bombing campaign has drawn repeated criticism from human rights
groups for the high number of civilian casualties.
'Expected
for a long time'
Saudi
Arabia's intervention in Yemen in March 2015 signalled a more aggressive
foreign policy, emphasised again this month when the kingdom and its allies
imposed an embargo on neighbouring Qatar.
They
accused Doha of supporting extremists, a charge it denies.
![]() |
Saudi King
Salman has ousted his nephew as crown prince and installed
his son Mohammed bin
Salman (pictured) (AFP Photo/)
|
Mohammed's
appointment as heir to the throne completes a gradual stripping of power from
the ousted crown prince, Mohammed bin Nayef, 57, who has also been fired as
deputy prime minister and interior minister.
An April
government and security shakeup prepared the way for Mohammed bin Salman's
rise, when a number of his allies were appointed to prominent positions and a
brother was named ambassador to Washington.
While the
exact timing of such a move had been uncertain, "it has been expected for
a long time," said analyst Riad Kahwaji, founder of the Institute for Near
East and Gulf Military Analysis (INEGMA).
Salman had
already set a precedent for removal of a crown prince when, in April 2015, he
appointed Mohammed bin Nayef and fired Prince Moqren bin Abdul Aziz bin Saud,
an appointee of King Abdullah.
Prince
Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Nayef -- the ousted interior minister's nephew -- was
named to replace him.
He takes
control of the security forces while the kingdom faces periodic shootings and
bombings claimed by the Islamic State group, as well as discontent among its
Shiite minority.




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