Saudi defense minister named throne heir
SAUDI Arabia's ruling family named Defense Minister Prince Salman bin Abdul-Aziz as the country's new crown prince yesterday - an expected nod that leaves power still within an aging and shrinking circle of leaders in one of the West's most critical Middle East allies.
The royal decree came the day after the burial of the late heir to the throne, Prince Nayef, who died last week in Geneva and was the crown prince only since November. Prince Salman, 76, is the third successor for the 88-year-old King Abdullah in the past year.
It reflects the issues of health and age that will one day turn control of the oil giant to a younger generation, as the Mideast is shaken by political upheavals and calls for change that have so far been held back by Gulf leaders.
Salman served for more than four decades as the governor of Riyadh, the capital, and is the patriarch of family businesses that include stakes in the pan-Arab daily newspaper Al-Sharq al-Awsat, an important media tool for Saudi rulers.
Nayef was considered wary of even the modest changes brought by King Abdullah, including vows to allow women to vote and run in the next municipal elections in 2015. Salman is also viewed as a traditionalist, but not deeply tied to the ultraconservative Islamic religious establishment that gives the Saudi monarchy its legitimacy to rule.
Salman's links to Saudi religious charities brought him into controversy as one of the defendants in a lawsuit by insurance companies that accused Saudi Arabia of funneling money to al-Qaida. A United States appeals court in New York had ruled in 2008 that the Saudi royal family and other defendants enjoy immunity from such lawsuits.
As part of the succession shake-up, Prince Ahmed was promoted from deputy interior minister to take Nayef's place leading the ministry. The move appears to put Ahmed, believed to be in his early 70s, in a position to be in line for the throne.
The royal decree came the day after the burial of the late heir to the throne, Prince Nayef, who died last week in Geneva and was the crown prince only since November. Prince Salman, 76, is the third successor for the 88-year-old King Abdullah in the past year.
It reflects the issues of health and age that will one day turn control of the oil giant to a younger generation, as the Mideast is shaken by political upheavals and calls for change that have so far been held back by Gulf leaders.
Salman served for more than four decades as the governor of Riyadh, the capital, and is the patriarch of family businesses that include stakes in the pan-Arab daily newspaper Al-Sharq al-Awsat, an important media tool for Saudi rulers.
Nayef was considered wary of even the modest changes brought by King Abdullah, including vows to allow women to vote and run in the next municipal elections in 2015. Salman is also viewed as a traditionalist, but not deeply tied to the ultraconservative Islamic religious establishment that gives the Saudi monarchy its legitimacy to rule.
Salman's links to Saudi religious charities brought him into controversy as one of the defendants in a lawsuit by insurance companies that accused Saudi Arabia of funneling money to al-Qaida. A United States appeals court in New York had ruled in 2008 that the Saudi royal family and other defendants enjoy immunity from such lawsuits.
As part of the succession shake-up, Prince Ahmed was promoted from deputy interior minister to take Nayef's place leading the ministry. The move appears to put Ahmed, believed to be in his early 70s, in a position to be in line for the throne.
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