Rights group says Saudi Arabia is holding a senior prince incommunicado
since March
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[May 09, 2020]
DUBAI (Reuters) - Human Rights Watch
(HRW) said on Saturday that Saudi Arabian authorities recently detained
and are holding incommunicado Prince Faisal bin Abdullah, who had
previously been netted in an anti-corruption drive and released in late
2017.
The U.S.-based rights group, citing a source with ties to the royal
family, said Prince Faisal bin Abdullah, a son of late monarch King
Abdullah, was detained by security forces on March 27 while
self-isolating due to the coronavirus pandemic at a family compound
northeast of the capital Riyadh.
Reuters could not immediately independently verify the detention. The
Saudi government media office did not immediately respond to a detailed
Reuters request for comment.
Earlier in March, authorities had detained King Salman's brother, Prince
Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, and former crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef, who was
replaced in a 2017 palace coup and placed under house arrest, sources
had told Reuters.
Sources with royal connections said at the time that the move was a
preemptive effort to ensure compliance within the ruling Al Saud family
ahead of an eventual succession to the throne by Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman upon the king's death or abdication.
It was not clear if the reported detention of Prince Faisal was related
to those in early March, which also saw Ahmed's son Nayef and Mohammed
bin Nayef's brother Nawaf detained.
Saudi authorities have not commented on those detentions, which follow
crackdowns on dissent in which clerics, intellectuals and rights
activists have been arrested, and an anti-corruption drive launched in
2017 that netted scores of royals, ministers and businessmen.
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Critics have said the campaigns were part of moves by Crown Prince
Mohammed, the king's son and the kingdom's de facto ruler, to
consolidate his grip on power.
"Now we have to add Prince Faisal to the hundreds detained in Saudi
Arabia without a clear legal basis," said Michael Page, deputy
Middle East director at HRW.
The kingdom has regularly denied allegations of unfair detention.
Authorities said last year the government was winding down the
anti-corruption campaign after 15 months, but would continue to go
after graft.
HRW said Prince Faisal's whereabouts or status are not known.
"The source said that Prince Faisal has not publicly criticized
authorities since his December 2017 arrest and that family members
are concerned about his health as he has a heart condition," it
added.
In late December 2017, a senior Saudi official said Prince Faisal
and another royal, Prince Meshaal bin Abdullah, were released from
Riyadh's Ritz-Carlton hotel, where people nabbed in the
anti-corruption drive were being held, after reaching an undisclosed
financial settlement with the government.
(Reporting by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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