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Showing posts with label Saudi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saudi. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Gubernur Ibu Kota Saudi wafat

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Riyadh (ANTARA News) - Gubernur Riyadh Pangeran Sattam bin Abdul Aziz, saudara dari raja Saudi, meninggal pada Selasa, kata kantor berita negara SPA melaporkan tanpa mengatakan apa yang menyebabkan kematiannya.

SPA mengutip pernyataan yang mengatakan bahwa Pangeran Sattam, yang dalam usia 70-an, akan dimakamkan di ibu kota Saudi pada Rabu.

Laporan singkat itu tidak memberikan rincian lain tentang mengapa dan di mana kematian itu terjadi.

Pangeran Sattam diangkat menjadi gubernur Riyadh setelah saudara tirinya, Pangeran Salman, ditunjuk sebagai menteri pertahanan pada Oktober 2011.

Pada Maret tahun lalu, dia memutuskan untuk mengizinkan pria lajang di Riyadh untuk mengunjungi pusat perbelanjaan saat jam sibuk, pembatasan yang bertujuan untuk mengurangi atau menghentikan pelecehan perempuan.

Di bawah aturan suksesi di Arab Saudi, kekuasaan berpindah dari saudara ke saudara, menghormati hukum hak kesulungan antara anak-anak dari pendiri kerajaan Abdul Aziz bin Saud.

Sattam merupakan salah satu anak yang paling tinggi profil dari keluarga Saud dan dianggap sebagai raja masa depan.

Usia Raja Abdullah II dan seringnya rawat inap kerap menyuarakan keprihatinan tentang kepemimpinan masa depan kerajaan Teluk ultra-konservatif itu, yang adalah pemain penting di Timur Tengah dan eksportir utama minyak.

Para pemerhati percaya bahwa semakin tuanya dinasti Al-Saud akan harus merenungkan dalam menyerahkan tongkat untuk generasi baru, cucu dari pendiri kerajaan, demikian AFP.

(H-AK)



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News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer; Car Insurance; Health Insurance

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Saudi Arabia names crown prince

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27 October 2011 Last updated at 23:40 GMT Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz al Saud Saudi Arabia's new Crown Prince Nayef has served as interior minister since 1975 Saudi Arabia has named Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz al Saud as the heir to the throne of King Abdullah.

The move follows the death last week of the previous crown prince, Sultan bin Abdul Aziz.

The new crown prince, aged 78, has been the oil-rich kingdom's interior minister since 1975 and will now also become deputy prime minister.

King Abdullah, 87, is recovering from his third operation to treat back problems in less than a year.

Prince Nayef is a brother of the late Crown Prince Sultan, and like his brother, is regarded as less reform-minded than King Abdullah. He has been interior minister since 1975.

A royal court statement read out on state television said the crown prince had been appointed after the king met the Allegiance Council, a family body set up in 2006 to make the process of succession in the conservative Islamic kingdom smoother and more orderly.

The succession in Saudi Arabia still passes among the sons of King Abdulaziz, who established the modern Saudi kingdom during his reign from 1902 to 1953.

Next in line is expected to be Crown Prince Nayef's younger brother, Prince Salman, who is the governor of Riyadh.



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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Saudi Arabia buries Crown Prince Sultan

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Security guards make a human chain blocking people as the airplane carrying the body of Saudi Crown Prince, Sultan bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, who died in the U.S. on Saturday, arrives at Riyadh Military Air Base in Saudi Arabia, October 24, 2011. REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed

1 of 2. Security guards make a human chain blocking people as the airplane carrying the body of Saudi Crown Prince, Sultan bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, who died in the U.S. on Saturday, arrives at Riyadh Military Air Base in Saudi Arabia, October 24, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Hamad I Mohammed

By Asma Alsharif

RIYADH | Tue Oct 25, 2011 5:07pm EDT

RIYADH (Reuters) - The funeral of Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Sultan on Tuesday set the stage for King Abdullah to name a new heir, widely expected to be veteran Interior Minister Prince Nayef, a choice that would emphasize stability in the world's top oil exporter.

Amid the flashing of cameras, Sultan's sons and brothers carried his corpse, swathed in a brown shroud, on a bier through a throng of mourners in Riyadh's sprawling Imam Turki bin Abdullah mosque for funeral prayers before burial.

The body of Sultan, who died of colon cancer in New York on Saturday, was flown back to Riyadh on Monday, accompanied by his younger brother and Riyadh Governor Prince Salman, who may now play a more prominent role in the conservative Islamic kingdom.

Among the mourners who went forward to greet King Abdullah after the prayer recital was Iran's Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, whose country is a regional rival of Saudi Arabia.

Earlier this month Tehran was accused of backing a plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington, soon after Riyadh had blamed armed protests among its Shi'ite minority on an unnamed foreign power -- a coded reference to Iran.

The Royal Court said it would be open to accept condolences for three days from Tuesday. A U.S. delegation headed by Vice President Joe Biden is expected in Riyadh on Thursday.

At stake in Saudi Arabia's transition is the direction of a major U.S. ally with an aging leadership trying to reconcile its conservative traditions with the needs of a modern economy and a young, increasingly outward-looking population.

"In the political system this is an important event, but the system is designed to ensure continuity," said Jarmo Kotilaine, Chief Economist at National Commercial Bank in Jeddah.

"Economic policy is put in place over a much longer period and is not likely to change at all."

In his six-year-old reign, King Abdullah has pushed changes aimed at creating jobs by liberalizing markets and loosening the grip of religious hardliners over education and social policy.

The death of Crown Prince Sultan, who was also defense minister, might also lead to a wider cabinet reshuffle.

Saudi Arabia, which dominates world oil markets and holds profound influence over Muslims through its guardianship of Islam's holiest sites in Mecca and Medina, faces turbulence in its neighbors and a confrontation with regional rival Iran.

Prince Nayef is sometimes described by Saudi liberals as an anti-reform conservative, who is likely to take a cautious approach to social and political change, while viewing foreign policy through the lens of national security.

However, former diplomats to Riyadh and some analysts say the man who has served as interior minister since 1975 may show a more pragmatic side as crown prince -- and eventually as king.

"Nayef had some time with Sultan's long illness to run himself in as crown prince and he has acted on behalf of the king," said one former diplomat. "He has become acquainted with authority across the board."

FUNERAL PRAYERS

King Abdullah was chief mourner at the mosque, where Saudis in red-and-white headdresses were crammed between dozens of pillars behind the kneeling Grand Mufti as he led prayers.

The octogenarian Saudi monarch, who left hospital on Saturday night after a back operation last week, remained seated for the prayers and wore a surgical mask over his face.

Guests at the funeral service, including the president of Afghanistan, the Syrian vice-president and the head of Egypt's ruling military council, paid condolences to King Abdullah as they filed out of the prayer hall.

The seniority of the delegations demonstrates Sultan's prominent role as defense minister over five decades when he used multi-billion-dollar arms purchases to strengthen Saudi armed forces and cement ties with Western allies.

King Abdullah, who is in day-to-day charge of Saudi Arabia despite his old age and back trouble, must also name a new defense minister.

One possible candidate is Prince Khaled bin Sultan, a son of the late crown prince who headed Saudi forces during the 1991 Gulf War and has been a deputy defense minister for 10 years.

The job could also go to Riyadh Governor Prince Salman, seen as the next most senior royal after the king and Prince Nayef.

PRINCE NAYEF

Given Sultan's long illness, Prince Nayef, born in 1933, has for many years been seen as the likely new crown prince.

"We need young blood," said a Jeddah resident in his 50s. "If they appoint another crown prince from (this generation) we will find ourselves in the same position in a few years because they are all old and we worry that the young ones may later struggle over power."

Nayef's conservative credentials as head of a ministry that has arrested political activists have disquieted liberal Saudis.

He was also quoted soon after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States as doubting that any of his compatriots had been involved when 15 of the 19 hijackers were in fact Saudis.

But Saudi-watchers said they anticipated few immediate national policy shifts if Nayef becomes crown prince.

"We do not expect any major or sudden changes in Saudi oil or foreign policy simply because the Saudi monarchy appears extremely cognizant of domestic challenges and their dependence on hydrocarbons to meet these challenges," said a research note issued by RBS.

During the long illness of Sultan and absences of the king, Nayef stood in for his elder brothers, meeting world leaders and managing the kingdom's day-to-day affairs.

"I don't think there will be a substantial change of direction," said Hossein Shobokshi, a Saudi columnist. "The country has always opted for the non-surprising method. So we don't see any big decisions in policy."

(Writing by Angus McDowall; Editing by Sami Aboudi)



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Saudi crown prince funeral held

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25 October 2011 Last updated at 14:56 GMT Television footage of the funeral of Crown Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz al Saud in Riyadh on 25 October 2011 The body was carried through the mourners for prayers before burial Dignitaries from around the world have gathered in the Saudi capital Riyadh for the funeral of Crown Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz al Saud.

They were among hundreds of mourners - including King Abdullah - for the ceremony in Riyadh's sprawling Imam Turki bin Abdullah mosque.

Prince Sultan, who was heir to the throne, died on Saturday in a New York hospital.

He was in his eighties and was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2004.

The crown prince - who was also minister of defence and aviation - had been on a visit to the US for medical tests, and had an operation in New York in July.

His body - flown back on Monday - was wrapped in brown cloth and carried through the throng of mourners for funeral prayers before being taken for burial at a nearby cemetery.

King Abdullah, 87, wore a surgical mask and remained seated during the ceremony. He is reportedly recovering from his third operation in less than a year to treat back problems.

Among 100 dignitaries in the mosque were the president of Afghanistan, the vice-president of Syria, the Iranian foreign minister and the head of Egypt's ruling military council, Reuters news agency reports.

Successor question

Crown Prince Sultan was a member of the most powerful family group in Saudi Arabia, the Sudairi Seven, and one of the sons of the country's founder, King Abdulaziz, known as Ibn Saud.

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Sultan Bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud in Riyadh in January 2008 While defence minister, Crown Prince Sultan modernised the country's armed forces

The Sudairi Seven are the sons of Ibn Saud's most influential wife, Hassa bint Ahmad al-Sudairi.

The oldest of the seven was King Fahd, who died in 2005 - to be succeeded by a half-brother, the current King Abdullah.

As defence minister, Crown Prince Sultan oversaw extraordinary expenditure on modernising the armed forces, as multi-billion dollar deals made Saudi Arabia one of the world's biggest arms spenders.

He was also one of the strongest supporters of forging close ties with the US - links which came under strain after 9/11.

A new heir to the throne has not yet been announced, but observers believe it will most likely be Prince Nayef, 78, a full brother of the crown prince.

He has been the interior minister, in charge of the security forces, since 1975. In contrast to King Abdullah, who is seen as a cautious reformer, Prince Nayef is believed to be closer to conservative Wahhabi clerics.

But Prince Nayef is reportedly not in the best of health.

Concern has been growing for years over how smoothly Saudi Arabia will be able to replace this generation of leaders when it dies out, the BBC's Middle East analyst Sebastian Usher says.

The shockwaves of the Arab Spring have complicated this further, raising new challenges to the credibility and legitimacy of all the Arab world's accustomed leaders, our correspondent adds.



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Monday, October 24, 2011

Saudi Arabia prepares for funeral of Crown Prince

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Saudi King Abdullah (2nd R) leaves a hospital in Riyadh October 22, 2011. REUTERS/Saudi Press Agency/Handout

Saudi King Abdullah (2nd R) leaves a hospital in Riyadh October 22, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Saudi Press Agency/Handout

By Angus McDowall

DUBAI | Sun Oct 23, 2011 6:36pm EDT

DUBAI (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia is preparing for the funeral of Crown Prince Sultan as attention inside the kingdom and abroad turns to his successor and the likely appointment of a new defense minister.

The kingdom's media continues to mourn Sultan, who was heir to King Abdullah for six years and had served as defense and aviation minister since 1962, after his death in New York on Saturday. An influx of world leaders is expected for Tuesday's funeral.

Veteran Interior Minister Prince Nayef, seen as more conservative than either Abdullah or Sultan, is widely tipped to be named in the coming days as the next in line to rule the world's top oil exporter.

Another key decision that might be made in coming days is the appointment of a new defense minister. Saudi Arabia has used multi-billion dollar arms purchases to cement its relations with key Western allies, making the defense minister a crucial figure in formulating both foreign and security policy.

Abdullah will probably choose to summon an Allegiance Council of the ruling al-Saud family, a body he created in 2006 but which will not technically assume its duties until after his death, to approve his choice of crown prince.

Prince Nayef has already assumed the day-to-day running of the kingdom during absences of both Abdullah and Sultan and has long been seen as next in line for the succession.

Despite his reputation as hawkish on foreign policy and opposed to some domestic political reforms, analysts say he might show a more liberal side as king.

Royal succession does not move directly from monarch to offspring, but has passed down a line of brothers born to the kingdom's founder King Abdulaziz Ibn Saud who died in 1953.

Whatever appointments he makes, King Abdullah will have to maintain a delicate balance of power in a royal family that has thousands of members, dozens of branches and dominates Saudi Arabia's government, armed forces and business.

The changes could prompt the monarch to undertake the first major government reshuffle of his reign, although some analysts say he might prefer to wait to avoid any perception that changes were being made under pressure.

(Reporting By Angus McDowall; editing by Andrew Roche)



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Saturday, October 1, 2011

Saudi woman driver to be lashed

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27 September 2011 Last updated at 13:19 GMT Saudi women get in the back seat of a car Saudi women will soon be allowed to vote but driving remains a banned activity A court in Saudi Arabia has sentenced a woman to 10 lashes for breaking the country's ban on female drivers.

The woman, identified only as Shema, was found guilty of driving in Jeddah in July.

Women2drive, which campaigns for women to be allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia, says she has already lodged an appeal.

In recent months, scores of women have driven vehicles in Saudi cities in an effort to put pressure on the monarchy to change the law.

The sentence comes two days after the Saudi leader King Abdullah announced women would be allowed to vote for the first time in 2015.

Two other women are due to appear in court later this year on similar charges, correspondents say.



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