Saudi Arabian government arrests 11 princes

Saudi Arabia said on Saturday that it had arrested a group of 11 princes who held a rare demonstration at a royal palace after the government halted payment of their electricity and water bills, according to a statement by the Saudi attorney general.

Saudi Arabia

The princes, who were arrested on Thursday after staging a sit-in, were also seeking compensation “for a death sentence that was issued against one of their cousins,” the statement said, adding that the cousin was convicted of murder and executed in 2016.

The arrests were the latest sign of tensions within the Saudi royal family as the kingdom’s young crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, assumes an increasingly dominant role in the country’s affairs.

Prince Mohammed, a close ally of the Trump administration, has introduced a raft of changes, including austerity measures and the easing of social restrictions that his supporters say are intended to modernize the country and diversify its economy.

During his sudden rise to power, the crown prince has also sidelined his most powerful rivals and moved to silence dissenting voices in an effort to consolidate his authority before eventually inheriting the throne from his father, King Salman, analysts said.

In November, the government arrested dozens of influential Saudis, including princes, cabinet ministers and business tycoons, detaining them at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Riyadh, the Saudi capital.

Officials said the arrests were part of a determined effort to root out corruption, but the unprecedented sweep also threatened to upend the kingdom’s delicate and decades-old balance of power, analysts said.

On Friday, King Salman ordered the payment of bonuses to government workers and military personnel — a move intended to soften the blow of austerity measures that included a reduction of gasoline subsidies and an increase in electricity prices, as well as the introduction of a value-added tax.

The attorney general, Sheikh Saud al-Mojeb, did not release the names of the princes arrested on Thursday. After they staged a sit-in at the Qasr al-Hokm palace in Riyadh, “the 11 princes refused to leave the area, disrupting public peace and order,” the statement said. They were being held at a maximum-security prison outside of the capital, pending trial on a number of unspecified charges, the statement said.

“No one is above the law in Saudi Arabia, everyone is equal and is treated the same as others,” the statement added.

Auto-crash along Lagos-Ibadan expressway claims 4 lives
"A little man" ~ Antonio Conte labelled Mourinho

What Do You Think?

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.