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King Abdullah has passed away - PDF extends its condolences to the Saudi people

A Saudi Palace Coup
David Hearst

Friday, 23 January 2015 14:55
105 71

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Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (New Saudi King pictured above) state of health is cause for concern, which is why the power he has given his son is more significant than other appointments announced. Aged 79, Salman is known to have Alzheimers, but the exact state of his dementia is a source of speculation



King Abdullah's writ lasted all of 12 hours . Within that period the Sudairis, a rich and politically powerful clan within the House of Saud, which had been weakened by the late king, burst back into prominence. They produced a palace coup in all but name.

Salman moved swiftly to undo the work of his half-brother. He decided not to change his crown prince Megren,who was picked by King Abdullah for him, but he may chose to deal with him later .However he swiftly appointed another leading figure from the Sudairi clan. Mohammed Bin Nayef, the interior minister is to be his deputy crown prince. It is no secret that Abdullah wanted his son Meteb for that position, but now he is out,

More significantly, Salman, himself a Sudairi, attempted to secure the second generation by giving his 35- year old son Mohammed the powerful fiefdom of the defence ministry . The second post Mohammed got was arguably more important. He is now general secretary of the Royal Court. All these changes were announced before Abdullah was even buried.

The general secretaryship was the position held by the Cardinal Richelieu of Abdullah's royal court, Khalid al-Tuwaijri. It was a lucrative business handed down from father to son and started by Abdul Aziz al Tuwaijri. The Tuwaijris became the king's gatekeepers and no royal audience could be held without their permission, involvement, or knowledge. Tuwaijri was the key player in foreign intrigues --to subvert the Egyptian revolution, to send in the troops to crush the uprising in Bahrain, to finance ISIL in Syria in the early stages of the civil war along his previous ally Prince Bandar bin Sultan.

The link between Tuwaijri and the Gulf region's fellow neo-con Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, was close. Tuwaijri is now out, and his long list of foreign clients , starting with the Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi may well feel a cooler wind blowing from Riyadh. Sisi failed to attend the funeral on Friday. Just a question of bad weather?

Salman's state of health is cause for concern, which is why the power he has given his son is more significant than other appointments announced. Aged 79, Salman is known to have Alzheimers, but the exact state of his dementia is a source of speculation. He is known to have held cogent conversations as recently as last October. But he can also forget what he said minutes ago, or faces he has known all his life, according to other witnesses. This is typical of the disease. I understand the number of hospital visits in the last few months has increased, and that he did not walk around, as he did before.

So his ability to steer the ship of state, in a centralised country where no institutions, political parties or even national politics exist, is open to question. But one indication of a change of direction may lie in two attempts recently to establish links with Egyptian opposition figures.

I am told that senior advisers to Salman approached an Egyptian liberal opposition politician and had a separate meeting with a lawyer. Neither of them are members of the Muslim Brotherhood but have working contacts with it. Talks were held in Saudi Arabia in the last two months about how reconciliation could be managed. No initiative was agreed, but the talks themselves were an indication of a more pragmatic, or less belligerent, approach by Salman and his advisers. It was understood that these meetings were preparatory to a possible initiative Salman may announce once he was in power.

The policy of the late King was to declare the Brotherhood terrorist organisation on a par with the Islamic State and al Qaeda.

Even before the Sudairis made their move, a power struggle within the House of Saud was apparent. Early on Thursday evening, rumours on twitter that the king was dead flooded the internet, which is the primary source of political information in the kingdom. There were official denials, when a Saudi journalist on al Watan newspaper tweeted the information.

The palace's hand was forced when two emirs tweeted that the king was dead. MBC TV network cut broadcasting and put the Koran on screen ,a sign of mourning, while national television kept on with normal programming. This was a sign that one clan in the royal family wanted the news out quickly and the other clan was stalling for more negotiations.

The need for a change of course is all too apparent. On the very night in which the royal drama was taking place, a political earthquake was taking place in Saudi Arabia's backyard, Yemen. President Abd Rabu Monsour Hadi, his prime minister and government resigned after days of virtual house arrest by Houthi militia. Hadi's resignation leaves two forces in control of the country both of them armed to the teeth : an Iranian backed militia which gets its training from Hezbollah, and al Qaeda, posing as the defender of Sunni muslims.

It is a disaster for Saudi Arabia and what is left of the ability of the Gulf Cooperation Council to make any deal stick. Their foreign ministers met only the day before. Yemen's former strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was levered out of power three years ago and who according to leaked telephone calls, advised the Houthis on how to grab power, is now calling for fresh elections, and there were already calls on Thursday night for the south to split away from the North. Yemen,in other words, has officially become the Middle East's fourth failed state.

The meteoric rise of the Houthis in Yemen was not the result of spontaneous combustion. It was planned and plotted months ago by Saleh and the United Arab Emirates. Saleh's son, the Yemeni ambassador to the UAE, was a key figure in this foreign intrigue, and as I reported before, he met an Iranian delegation in Rome. This was picked by US intelligence and communicated to Hadi. The year before, the then Saudi intelligence chief Prince Bandar flew a leading member of the Houthi delegation via London for a meeting. Incredible as it seemed, the Saudis were re-opening contact with an Iranian backed Zaydi or Shia sect with whom they had once fought bitter wars.

The Saudi/Emirati plan was to use the Houthis to engage and destroy their real target which was Islah, the Islamist party and chief representative of the Sunni tribes in Yemen. As elsewhere in the Arab world, the entire focus of Abdullah foreign policy after 2011 , was to stop the Arab spring in its tracks in Tunisia and Egypt and crush all forces capable of mounting an effective opposition in the Gulf States. Everything else, including the rise of Saudi's foremost regional rival Iran, became subservient to that paramount aim to crush democratic political Islam.

The Yemen plan backfired when Islah refused to take up arms to resist the Houthi advance. As a result, the Houthis took more control than they were expected to , and the result is that Yemen stands on the brink of civil war. Al Qaeda's claim to be the only fighters prepared to defend Sunni tribesmen, has just been given a major boost.

It is too early to tell whether King Salman is capable of , or even is aware of the need for changing course. All one can say with any confidence is that some of the key figures who stagemanaged the Kingdom's disastrous foreign intrigues are now out. Meteb's influence is limited, while Tuwaijiri is out.

It is in no-one's interests for chaos to spread into the Kingdom itself. Maybe it is just co-incidence that Abdullah died almost on the eve of the anniversary of the January 25 revolution in Egypt. But the timing of his death is a symbol.The royal family should learn that the mood of change, that started on January 25 is unstoppable. The best defence against revolution is to lead genuine tangible political reform within the Kingdom. Allow it to modernise, to build national politics, political parties, real competitive elections, to let Saudis take a greater share of power, to free political prisoners.

There are two theories about the slow train crash which the Middle East has become. One is that dictatorship, autocracy, and occupation are the bulwarks against the swirling chaos of civil war and population displacement. The other is that dictators are the cause of instability and extremism.

Abdullah was evidence in chief for the second theory. His reign left Saudi Arabia weaker internally and surrounded by enemies as never before. Can Salman make a difference ? Its a big task, but there may be people around him who see the need for a fundamental change in course. It will be the only way a Saudi King will get the backing of his people. He may in the process turn himself into a figurehead, a constitutional monarch, but he will generate stability in the kingdom and the region.



Article was first published at http://www.huffingtonpost.com
 
UK is source of all fabricated and controversial ahadith.

King Abdullah was the most feared King among the enemies of Islam and most cherished among his people.
I hope next King would be feared even more, by the enemies of Islam and would become even more popular among his people and Muslims world!
I love the way K. Abdullah tackled the difficult times in ME.
Its a sad moment for loosing some one, who helped Pakistan in thick and thin.
Pakistanis consider Saudis as brothers and will always be there, to share sentiments in your losses and success!

Okay calm down, yes the hadith is very weak and sources are difficult to find. But the King wasn't feared amongst enemies of Islam. I assume you must be referring to Shia. If you view them as enemies there are more than them though.

There is Sahih Sunni source hadith regarding dispute that will happen in Saudi Arabia. Which he will emerge during that period. Nobody knows which death of which leader. And when that time comes it doesn't mean Shia created hadith, there is a sahih hadith about it. And Mahdi is his title, but the leader will be coming for all Muslims. Which is good for us.

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:

The Messenger of Allah (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam) said: “In the month of Dhil Qada there will be fighting and breaching of agreements between the tribes due to which Hajjis (pilgrims) will be looted and there will be war in Mina. There will be a general massacre and a great deal of bloodshed, so much so that blood will be flowing even at Uqba Jumrah. It will come to a point that even the people of the Haram (including Hazrat Mahdi) will run and will come to the spot between the Rukn and Maqam Ibraheem and he will be pledged allegiance to, even though he (Mahdi) will dislike having the oath taken on him. It will be said to him that if you refuse to have the oath taken (to be our leader) we will strike your neck. Then the oath will be taken. The number of people who will take this pledge will be equal to the number of people at Badr. The inhabitants of the heavens and the earth will be pleased with them (the oath takers).” [Al-Mustadrak Ala As-Sahiheen]

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Many of these are still weak hadiths

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I believe this one is Sahih:

Hadhrat Umme Salmah(RA) narrates that Rasulullah(SAW) said:

After the death of a Ruler there will be some dispute between the people. At that time a citizen of Madina will flee (from Madina) and go to Makkah. While in Makkah, certain people will approach him between Hajrul Aswad and Maqaame Ibraheem, and forcefully pledge their allegiance to him.

Thereafter a huge army will proceed from Syria to attack him but when they will be at Baida, which is between Makkah and Madina, they will be swallowed into the ground.

On seeing this, the Abdaals of Shaam as well as large numbers of people from Iraq will come to him and pledge their allegiance to him. Then a person from the Quraish, whose uncle will be from the Bani Kalb tribe will send an army to attack him, only to be overpowered, by the will of Allah. This (defeated) army will be that of the Bani Kalb. Unfortunate indeed is he who does not receive a share from the booty of the Kalb. This person (Imam Mahdi) will distribute the spoils of war after the battle. He will lead the people according to the Sunnat and during his reign Islam will spread throughout the world. He will remain till seven years (since his emergence). He will pass away and the Muslims will perform his Janazah salaat.

(Abu Dawood)

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'Syria' in this refers to Shaam which is more than the current country Syria itself.
 
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24 hours after the King's burial yet the people of Arabia are still coming, individuals and groups to offer their funeral prayers praying for forgiveness and mercy for him.

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the is what we should all hope....Saudis and Iran hugging out to the applause of the OIC nations would be the single biggest victory for the Islamic world and the biggest snub to the west which WANTS all these civil wars and problems in the region

Lool keep blaming the west for all the evils in your region without looking at your own shortfalls. After all, I don't see the west forcing Saudi Arabia to hate/not make peace with Iran, of anything the Saudis are cen more hostile towards Iran than the west.:agree: SoSo before you blame the 'evil' west, you people have to look in the mirror yourselves. You are your own biggest ennemies not the west or Israel.:D:bounce:

Rip to the king.:cray:
 
Inna Lillahi oinna ilaihi rajiun - "Surely we belong to Allah and to Him shall we return". May Allah (swt) forgive his sins and have mercy on him and grant him paradise.

Simple burial maa shaa Allah ,keeping it inline with the pure Sunnah of Allah's messenger and traditions of Islam. No fancy tombstone, no wailing or tearing clothes. Quran and Sunnah being implemented Alhamdulillah.


shaykh yasir qadhi on the death of King Abdullah:


The Saudi King Abdullah b. Abd al-Aziz al-Saud passed away, at the ripe age of 90.


The death of such people, who had so much power and potential for influence, is typically met with two response: sycophants and nationalists (some under the guise of religion) who raise him to the level of a messianic figure and exaggerate his good deeds, and haters who blame the entire woes of the Ummah on him. As is typical, the truth is in between these two extremes, and the Sunnah is the best way forward.

The most Islamic response is to simply wish for him what we wish for every Muslim, for he has now gone to meet his Lord, and the Ever-Wise, All-Just, Most-Merciful will be in charge of him now. We pray for his forgiveness while acknowledging his humanity (and hence his mistakes).

And we are certain that if he was sincere to Allah, Allah will accept him and his good deeds, and if he were other than that, Allah will deal with him with perfect justice. But we wish for him what we wish for all people of faith: forgiveness, and a beautiful abode in the next life.

On a personal note: I have lived in that country for almost half my life, and I have a deep attachment to it, and worry about its future. I was a child in Jeddah when King Khaled died; then King Fahd right after I had finished my studies in Madinah; and now am hearing of the death of King Abdullah while I am in America. There is much unrest and potential for disunity now, and a clash between various factions (theological, political, social, and others) looms ominously ahead. My prayers and duas are with the people of that land, as that land is, in the end of the day, the land of revelation and the sanctuary of the two holy harams.

May Allah protect the lands of Makkah and Madinah, and put in charge of it those who will bring izzah and honor to Islam!
 


Saudi Arabia’s Tyrant King Misremembered as Man of Peace


After nearly 20 years as de facto ruler of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah ibn-Abdulaziz al-Saud died last night at the age of 90. Abdullah, who took power after his predecessor King Fahd suffered a stroke in 1995, ruled as absolute monarch of a country which protected American interests but also sowed strife and extremism throughout the Middle East and the world.

In a statement last night Senator John McCain eulogized Abdullah as “a vocal advocate for peace, speaking out against violence in the Middle East”. John Kerry described the late monarch as “a brave partner in fighting violent extremism” and “a proponent of peace”. Not to be outdone, Vice President Joe Biden released a statement mourning Abdullah and announced that he would be personally leading a presidential delegation to offer condolences on his passing.

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It’s not often that the unelected leader of a country which publicly flogs dissidents and beheads people for sorcery wins such glowing praise from American officials. Even more perplexing, perhaps, have been the fawning obituaries in the mainstream press which have faithfully echoed this characterization of Abdullah as a benign and well-intentioned man of peace.

Tiptoeing around his brutal dictatorship, The Washington Post characterized Abdullah as a “wily king” while The New York Times inexplicably referred to him as “a force of moderation”, while also suggesting that evidence of his moderation included having had: “hundreds of militants arrested and some beheaded”. (emphasis added)

While granting that Abdullah might be considered a relative moderate within the brazenly anachronistic House of Saud, the fact remains that he presided for two decades over a regime which engaged in wanton human rights abuses, instrumentalized religious chauvinism, and played a hugely counterrevolutionary role in regional politics.

Above all, he was not a leader who shied away from both calling for and engineering more conflict in the Middle East.
In contrast to Senator McCain’s description of Abdullah as “a vocal advocate of peace”, a State Department diplomatic cable released by Wikileaks revealed him in fact directly advocating for the United States to start more wars in the region.

In a quote recorded in a 2008 diplomatic cable, Abdullah exhorted American officials to “cut the head off the snake” by launching fresh military action against Iran. Notably, this war advocacy came in the midst of the still-ongoing bloodshed of the Iraq War, which had apparently left him unfazed about the prospect of a further escalation in regional warfare.
Abdullah’s government also waged hugely destructive proxy conflicts wherever direct American intervention on its behalf was not forthcoming. Indeed, in the case of almost every Arab Spring uprising, Saudi Arabia attempted to intervene forcefully in order to either shore up existing regimes or shape revolutions to conform with their own interests.

In Bahrain, Saudi forces intervened to crush a popular uprising which had threatened the rule of the ruling al-Khalifa monarchy, while in Syria Saudi-backed factions have helped turn what was once a popular democratic uprising into a bloody, intractable proxy war between regional rivals which is now a main driver of extremism in the Middle East.
Saudi efforts at counterrevolution and co-optation under Abdullah took more obliquely brutal forms as well.

In the midst of the 2011 revolution in Egypt, when seemingly the entire world was rallying in support of the protestors in Tahrir Square, King Abdullah stood resolutely and unapologetically on the side of Hosni Mubarak’s regime. When it seemed like Mubarak was wavering in the face of massive popular protests, the king offered to step in with economic aid for his government and demanded that President Obama ensure he not be “cast aside”.

A few years later when the pendulum swung back towards dictatorship after General Abdelfattah al Sisi’s bloody 2013 coup, Abdullah and his fellow monarchs were there to lavish much needed financial assistance upon the new regime.

This support came with the endorsement of Sisi’s unrelentingly brutal crackdown on Egypt’s former revolutionaries.
With increasingly disastrous consequences, Abdullah’s government also employed sectarianism as a force to help divide-and-conquer regional populations and insulate his own government from the threat of uprising. It also cynically utilized its official religious authorities to try and equate political dissent with sinfulness.

This ostentatiously reckless behavior nevertheless seemed to win Abdullah’s regime the tacit approval of the American government, which steadfastly continued to treat him as a partner in fighting terrorism and maintaining regional stability.

Despite recent tensions over American policy towards Iran and Syria, Saudi under King Abdullah played a vital role in U.S. counterterrorism operations. The country quietly hosts a CIA drone base used for conducting strikes into Yemen, including the strike believed to have killed American-born preacher Anwar al-Awlaki. More controversially, Abdullah’s government is also believed to have provided extensive logistical support for American military operations during the invasion of Iraq; an uncomfortable fact which the kingdom has understandably tried to keep quiet with its own population.

Perhaps most importantly however, King Abdullah upheld the economic cornerstones of America’s long and fateful alliance with Saudi Arabia: arms purchases and the maintenance of a reliable flow of oil from the country to global markets. The one Saudi king who in past failed to hold up part of this agreement met with an untimely end, and was seemingly on less positive terms with American government officials.

Given the foundations upon which American-Saudi ties rest, it’s unlikely that the relationship will be drastically altered by the passing of King Abdullah and the succession of his brother Prince Salman. Regardless of how venal, reckless, or brutal his government may choose to be, as long as it protects American interests in the Middle East it will inevitably be showered with plaudits and support, just as its predecessor was.

Saudi Arabia's Tyrant King Misremembered as Man of Peace - The Intercept
 
Yusuf chambers:

Inna Lillahi wa inna ilaihi raji'un
إِنَّا لِلّهِ وَإِنَّـا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعونَ

"Surely we belong to Allah and to Him shall we return"

.A simple burial for the King of Saudi Arabia how beautiful the sunnah is

كُلُّ نَفْسٍ ذَآئِقَةُ الْمَوْتِ وَإِنَّمَا تُوَفَّوْنَ أُجُورَكُمْ يَوْمَ الْقِيَامَةِ فَمَن زُحْزِحَ عَنِ النَّارِ وَأُدْخِلَ الْجَنَّةَ فَقَدْ فَازَ وَما الْحَيَاةُ الدُّنْيَا إِلاَّ مَتَاعُ الْغُرُورِ

Everyone shall taste death. And only on the Day of Resurrection shall you be paid your wages in full. And whoever is removed away from the Fire and admitted to Paradise, he indeed is successful. The life of this world is only the enjoyment of deception (a deceiving thing)
3:185 Qu'ran

Simple burial maa shaa Allah keeping it inline with the pure Sunnah of Allah's messenger and traditions of Islam. No fancy tombstone, no wailing or tearing clothes. Quran and Sunnah being implemented Alhamdulillah. May Allah have mercy on King Abdullah

"Do not speak ill of the dead; they have seen the result of (the deeds) that they forwarded before them."

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Indian scholar recalls King Abdullah’s excellent role | Arab News

Sheikh Abubaker Ahmed
JEDDAH: ARAB NEWS
Published — Sunday 25 January 2015
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“To Allah we belong and to Him we shall return,” said Indian Islamic scholar Sheikh Abubaker Ahmed. “I express my heartfelt condolences on the sad demise of King Abdullah. I join the family of King Abdullah and other members of the royal family, in their sorrow and grief,” he added.

Sheikh Abubaker said: “I would like to recall that, under King Abdullah, who took the throne in 2005, Saudi Arabia has been playing a key role for the wellbeing of the world in a wider sense. He stood solidly against the inhuman militants and global terrorism. He was a true follower of his predecessors who led the Kingdom toward progress and prosperity. King Abdullah was instrumental in promoting strong bilateral relations and international cooperation.

“May Almighty Allah forgive him and reward him with His paradise for his great services to the Ummah. We beseech Allah to strengthen the royal family so that they can achieve greater achievements.”
 
Mohammad Hamid-Ansari (left), the Vice-President of India, is welcomed by a member of the Saudi royal family. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi could not visit personally as he is occupied at home with a visit from U.S. President Obama
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Mr Cameron and Prince Charles in Saudi Arabia
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French President Francois Hollande shakes hands with Turki bin Abdullah al-Saud, the Governor of Riyadh Province
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Spain's King Felipe VI is welcomed at Riyadh airport, as leaders from across the world arrived to pay respects
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Turki bin Abdullah bin Abdelaziz (left), a Saudi Prince and the Emir of Riyadh, welcomes Chinese State Councillor Yang Jiechi
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Carl XVI Gustaf, the king of Sweden is greeted by the Mayor of Riyadh as he touches down in Saudi Arabia
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The president of Mauritania, Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz (left), pictured upon his arrival at Riyadh airport
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Dutch King Willem-Alexande is greeted by Saudi dignataries as he arrives to give his country's condolences
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Royalty from all across Europe descended on the country's capital today. Pictured is the Crown Prince of Norway, Haakon Magnus (right) with a member of the Saudi monarchy
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Frederik, the Crown Prince of Denmark, disembarks from his plane. He is one of dozens of foreign dignitaries who are visiting to pay their respects to King Abdullah
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Nigerian Vice President Namadi Sambo (right) lands in Riyadh to a warm greeting
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French President Francois Hollande and French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian (left) are welcomed by the Governor of Riyadh Province, Turki bin Abdullah al-Saud during a ceremony after arriving in Riyadh
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Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan touches down in Riyadh airport, in Saudi Arabia, today
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Saudi Prince and Emir of Riyadh Turki bin Abdullah bin Abdelaziz welcome Prince Moulay Rachid of Morocco
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The grave of King Abdullah :

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And the grave of Hafiz Al-Assad:

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Shiek Zayed grave
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Hariri grave
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Jordan royal cemetery.. Only for royal members
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And etc... So your comparison shows nothing... For you death of your "king" is nothing since he didn't rule but the west did... But for others the death of their leaders is physical only.. But their legacy lives on and they show it by special funerals and etc...
I can start insulting your "king" like you did when insulting the death of Syrians, but I won't go down to your level...
 
A Saudi Palace Coup
David Hearst

Friday, 23 January 2015 14:55
105 71

Salman-bin-Abdulaziz-Al-Saud.jpg

Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (New Saudi King pictured above) state of health is cause for concern, which is why the power he has given his son is more significant than other appointments announced. Aged 79, Salman is known to have Alzheimers, but the exact state of his dementia is a source of speculation



King Abdullah's writ lasted all of 12 hours . Within that period the Sudairis, a rich and politically powerful clan within the House of Saud, which had been weakened by the late king, burst back into prominence. They produced a palace coup in all but name.

Salman moved swiftly to undo the work of his half-brother. He decided not to change his crown prince Megren,who was picked by King Abdullah for him, but he may chose to deal with him later .However he swiftly appointed another leading figure from the Sudairi clan. Mohammed Bin Nayef, the interior minister is to be his deputy crown prince. It is no secret that Abdullah wanted his son Meteb for that position, but now he is out,

More significantly, Salman, himself a Sudairi, attempted to secure the second generation by giving his 35- year old son Mohammed the powerful fiefdom of the defence ministry . The second post Mohammed got was arguably more important. He is now general secretary of the Royal Court. All these changes were announced before Abdullah was even buried.

The general secretaryship was the position held by the Cardinal Richelieu of Abdullah's royal court, Khalid al-Tuwaijri. It was a lucrative business handed down from father to son and started by Abdul Aziz al Tuwaijri. The Tuwaijris became the king's gatekeepers and no royal audience could be held without their permission, involvement, or knowledge. Tuwaijri was the key player in foreign intrigues --to subvert the Egyptian revolution, to send in the troops to crush the uprising in Bahrain, to finance ISIL in Syria in the early stages of the civil war along his previous ally Prince Bandar bin Sultan.

The link between Tuwaijri and the Gulf region's fellow neo-con Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, was close. Tuwaijri is now out, and his long list of foreign clients , starting with the Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi may well feel a cooler wind blowing from Riyadh. Sisi failed to attend the funeral on Friday. Just a question of bad weather?

Salman's state of health is cause for concern, which is why the power he has given his son is more significant than other appointments announced. Aged 79, Salman is known to have Alzheimers, but the exact state of his dementia is a source of speculation. He is known to have held cogent conversations as recently as last October. But he can also forget what he said minutes ago, or faces he has known all his life, according to other witnesses. This is typical of the disease. I understand the number of hospital visits in the last few months has increased, and that he did not walk around, as he did before.

So his ability to steer the ship of state, in a centralised country where no institutions, political parties or even national politics exist, is open to question. But one indication of a change of direction may lie in two attempts recently to establish links with Egyptian opposition figures.

I am told that senior advisers to Salman approached an Egyptian liberal opposition politician and had a separate meeting with a lawyer. Neither of them are members of the Muslim Brotherhood but have working contacts with it. Talks were held in Saudi Arabia in the last two months about how reconciliation could be managed. No initiative was agreed, but the talks themselves were an indication of a more pragmatic, or less belligerent, approach by Salman and his advisers. It was understood that these meetings were preparatory to a possible initiative Salman may announce once he was in power.

The policy of the late King was to declare the Brotherhood terrorist organisation on a par with the Islamic State and al Qaeda.

Even before the Sudairis made their move, a power struggle within the House of Saud was apparent. Early on Thursday evening, rumours on twitter that the king was dead flooded the internet, which is the primary source of political information in the kingdom. There were official denials, when a Saudi journalist on al Watan newspaper tweeted the information.

The palace's hand was forced when two emirs tweeted that the king was dead. MBC TV network cut broadcasting and put the Koran on screen ,a sign of mourning, while national television kept on with normal programming. This was a sign that one clan in the royal family wanted the news out quickly and the other clan was stalling for more negotiations.

The need for a change of course is all too apparent. On the very night in which the royal drama was taking place, a political earthquake was taking place in Saudi Arabia's backyard, Yemen. President Abd Rabu Monsour Hadi, his prime minister and government resigned after days of virtual house arrest by Houthi militia. Hadi's resignation leaves two forces in control of the country both of them armed to the teeth : an Iranian backed militia which gets its training from Hezbollah, and al Qaeda, posing as the defender of Sunni muslims.

It is a disaster for Saudi Arabia and what is left of the ability of the Gulf Cooperation Council to make any deal stick. Their foreign ministers met only the day before. Yemen's former strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was levered out of power three years ago and who according to leaked telephone calls, advised the Houthis on how to grab power, is now calling for fresh elections, and there were already calls on Thursday night for the south to split away from the North. Yemen,in other words, has officially become the Middle East's fourth failed state.

The meteoric rise of the Houthis in Yemen was not the result of spontaneous combustion. It was planned and plotted months ago by Saleh and the United Arab Emirates. Saleh's son, the Yemeni ambassador to the UAE, was a key figure in this foreign intrigue, and as I reported before, he met an Iranian delegation in Rome. This was picked by US intelligence and communicated to Hadi. The year before, the then Saudi intelligence chief Prince Bandar flew a leading member of the Houthi delegation via London for a meeting. Incredible as it seemed, the Saudis were re-opening contact with an Iranian backed Zaydi or Shia sect with whom they had once fought bitter wars.

The Saudi/Emirati plan was to use the Houthis to engage and destroy their real target which was Islah, the Islamist party and chief representative of the Sunni tribes in Yemen. As elsewhere in the Arab world, the entire focus of Abdullah foreign policy after 2011 , was to stop the Arab spring in its tracks in Tunisia and Egypt and crush all forces capable of mounting an effective opposition in the Gulf States. Everything else, including the rise of Saudi's foremost regional rival Iran, became subservient to that paramount aim to crush democratic political Islam.

The Yemen plan backfired when Islah refused to take up arms to resist the Houthi advance. As a result, the Houthis took more control than they were expected to , and the result is that Yemen stands on the brink of civil war. Al Qaeda's claim to be the only fighters prepared to defend Sunni tribesmen, has just been given a major boost.

It is too early to tell whether King Salman is capable of , or even is aware of the need for changing course. All one can say with any confidence is that some of the key figures who stagemanaged the Kingdom's disastrous foreign intrigues are now out. Meteb's influence is limited, while Tuwaijiri is out.

It is in no-one's interests for chaos to spread into the Kingdom itself. Maybe it is just co-incidence that Abdullah died almost on the eve of the anniversary of the January 25 revolution in Egypt. But the timing of his death is a symbol.The royal family should learn that the mood of change, that started on January 25 is unstoppable. The best defence against revolution is to lead genuine tangible political reform within the Kingdom. Allow it to modernise, to build national politics, political parties, real competitive elections, to let Saudis take a greater share of power, to free political prisoners.

There are two theories about the slow train crash which the Middle East has become. One is that dictatorship, autocracy, and occupation are the bulwarks against the swirling chaos of civil war and population displacement. The other is that dictators are the cause of instability and extremism.

Abdullah was evidence in chief for the second theory. His reign left Saudi Arabia weaker internally and surrounded by enemies as never before. Can Salman make a difference ? Its a big task, but there may be people around him who see the need for a fundamental change in course. It will be the only way a Saudi King will get the backing of his people. He may in the process turn himself into a figurehead, a constitutional monarch, but he will generate stability in the kingdom and the region.



Article was first published at http://www.huffingtonpost.com
Does any common saudi (not a prince) finds it upsetting that he/she will find it difficult if not impossible to get to be a minister in govt?
Also are they nervous about transition? because its going to be intense backroom manuvres in next few days.
 

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