Two detained Saudi princes reportedly being treated well, held in royal villas


Two detained Saudi princes reportedly being treated well, held in royal villas

The detention on Friday of the king’s younger brother, Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, and one of his nephews, Mohammed bin Nayef, had sparked a flurry of rumors that Salman’s health may have deteriorated, prompting the bold move by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the king’s son and heir, against some of the most senior members of the royal family.

Royal guards detained the two princes as they responded to an early morning summons to meet the crown prince at the palace, said the person with ties to the royal family, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject. The two princes have in the past been considered as possible heirs to the crown.

He said they telephoned family members on Saturday and told them that they were being held not in prisons but in private royal villas. Ahmed asked relatives to send him his “bisht,” a robe worn for official engagements, prompting the person to speculate that the prince may soon make a public appearance.

At least two other princes, Mohammed bin Nayef’s brother, Nawaf, and Ahmed’s son, Nayef, also were detained in what appears to be a bid to intimidate the highest echelons of the royal family. As many as 15 senior princes may have received summonses to the palace for interrogation, according to a list of names circulating among people with connections to the Saudi court.

Rumors inevitably flew — that the princes were plotting a coup, that the 84-year-old king had died or was dying — but no evidence has surfaced to substantiate them.

Another person who is close to the royal court stressed that the arrests did not signal any disruption. “It was due to an accumulation of behaviors, and the leadership lost patience with them,” he said. “There’s no transition or any drama.” The person, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity, did not specify what the behaviors were.

The arrests were consistent, however, with Mohammed’s authoritarian style since he became the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia in 2017, taking on most of the day-to-day running of the government from his father and embarking on a crackdown against critics and rivals. His purges have ensnared a wide range of people: journalists; clerics; the women campaigning for the right to drive; Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, who was brutally murdered in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul by Saudi state agents, according to the CIA and a United Nations inquiry.

Mohammed bin Nayef had served as crown prince and was in line to be the next king before Mohammed and his father ousted him in a palace coup in 2017. Ahmed, the king’s younger brother, could be seen as a more natural heir to the throne than Mohammed, because the line of succession has historically passed from brother to brother among the sons of the kingdom’s founder, King Saud.

Saudi kings have, however, also reserved the right to designate their successor, by naming a crown prince. Salman anointed Mohammed as his heir after ousting Mohammed bin Nayef in 2017.

Locking up two princes of such senior rank “sends a message to the junior guys that ‘I can do it to the senior guys,’ so the junior guys fall into line,” said Michael Stephens of the London-based Royal United Services Institute.

There doesn’t need to be a reason for him to have done so at this time, Stephens said.

“He’s a dictator. That’s what dictators do. MBS has slowly but surely made sure people who could challenge him were removed from power and ensured that people in the family understand the message of that,” the research fellow said. “There’s not going to be much backlash, internally or externally.”

Salman has ceded most of the country’s governance and policymaking to his son. But he continues to carry out ceremonial duties and greet foreign dignitaries. He had been photographed meeting British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab a day before the arrests, and one Saudi with royal connections said the king had lunched with a friend hours after the princes were detained.

Nakashima and Fahim reported from Washington.


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