Challenging the Saudi Crown Prince: Alwaleed bin Talal toughs it out
By James M. Dorsey
Incarcerated for almost two months in a gilded cage in
Riyadh’s luxurious Ritz Carlton Hotel, Saudi billionaire businessman Prince
Al-Waleed bin Talal appears to be putting up a fight that could challenge
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s assertion that his two month-old purge of
scores of members of the ruling family, senior officials, and businessmen constitutes
a campaign against corruption.
Many of those detained in Prince Mohammed’s purge, dubbed by
critics as a power and asset grab dressed up as an anti-corruption
effort, have bought their release by agreeing to surrender significant
assets. The government has said it hopes to recover up to $100
billion in allegedly illegitimately acquired funds and assets.
Prince
Mutaib bin Abdullah, a favoured son of the late King Abdullah who was deposed
as commander of the National Guard in a bid to neutralize the Saudi crown
prince’s most potent rival, secured his release by agreeing
to pay $1 billion and signing a document in which he confessed to charges
of corruption.
In what appears to be the largest settlement demand, Prince
Al-Waleed has, according to The
Wall Street Journal, resisted pressure by the government to hand over $6
billion.
Instead, the prince has reportedly offered the government a significant
stake in his Riyadh-listed Kingdom Holding that has invested in blue chips such
as Citibank, Twitter, Four Seasons hotels, and Disney, and operates a media and
entertainment empire. Kingdom Holding has lost 14 percent of its $8.7 billion
market value since Prince Al-Waleed’s detention. The prince has also insisted
that he retain a leadership position in his conglomerate.
With a fortune estimated by Forbes
at $16.8 billion, Prince Al-Waleed reportedly believes that the cash settlement
demanded by the government would put his empire at peril and amount to an
admission of guilt.
That may indeed be the purpose of the exercise. A social
reformer, who already years ago implemented within his own company changes of
women’s status announced in recent months by Prince Mohammed, is Saudi Arabia’s
most prominent entrepreneur who is continuously welcomed around the world by
heads of state and government and business moguls.
The son of Prince Talal bin Abdulaziz, a liberal nicknamed
the Red Prince, who in the 1960s and again in the first decade of the 21st
century publicly criticized his family’s rule, Prince Al-Waleed is believed to
have no political ambitions.
In resisting Prince Mohammed’s demands, Prince Al-Waleed is
challenging an opaque and seemingly arbitrary process in which despite
assertions by the government that it has conducted extensive investigations and
collected substantial evidence of corruption, bribery, money laundering and
extortion, there has been little, if any, discernible due process and no proof publicly
presented.
Quoting sources close to Prince Al-Waleed, The Wall Street
Journal reported that the businessman was demanding a proper investigation and
was willing to fight it out in court. “He wants a proper investigation. It is
expected that al-Waleed will give MBS a hard time,” the Journal quoted a person
close to Prince Al-Waleed as saying. The person was referring to Prince
Mohammed by his initials.
A court battle would put the government’s assertions of due
process to the test and would also shine a spotlight on the integrity of Saudi
Arabia’s judicial system. The risk involved in a legal battle is that the charges
levelled against Prince Al-Waleed and others were common practice in a kingdom
in which there were no well-defined rules governing relationships between
members of the ruling family and the government as well as ties between princes
and princesses who wielded influence and businessmen.
There is little doubt that Prince Mohammed’s purge is
popular among significant segments of the population, half of which is
classified as low-
or middle-income families, that has long resented the elite’s seemingly
unbridled perks.
Prince Mohammed has so far been shielded against questions
of the source of his own wealth and that of his tack of the ruling family. Several
immediate relatives of Prince Mohammed were last year identified in the Panama Papers leaked from the files
of a law firm in the Central American nation that handled offshore business and
transactions by the world’s mega-rich.
Media reports have since suggested that the prince had spent
in recent years $1.25
billion on a $500 million yacht, a $300 million mansion in France, and a
$450 million Leonardo da Vinci painting. Prince Mohammed has denied
buying the art work that was acquired by a close associate of his allegedly on
behalf of the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism.
Shining the spotlight on the anti-corruption campaign in a
legal battle with Prince Al-Waleed would come at a time that the government is
unilaterally rewriting the kingdom’s social contract that involved a
cradle-to-grave-welfare state in exchange for surrender of political rights and
acceptance of Sunni Muslim ultra-conservative and Bedouin moral codes.
The government this week paid $533 million into a newly
established social welfare fund to help families offset the cost of the
imminent introduction of a five-percent value-added tax on goods including food,
and services, as well as subsidy cuts that would substantially raise the price
of electricity and gasoline. The government was forced earlier this year to
reverse a freeze on public sector wage increases and perks and slowdown its
austerity program because of anger and frustration expressed on social media.
Labor and Social Development Minister Ali al-Ghafees told
the state-run Saudi Press Agency that approximately three million families or
10.6 million beneficiaries had already been paid the maximum relief of 938 Saudi
riyals ($250) out of the newly created fund.
The government, moreover, this month announced a $19bn
stimulus package that includes subsidised loans for house buyers and
developers, fee waivers for small businesses and financial support for
distressed companies. It also presented its new
budget involving record spending in which funding of defense outstrips that
of education in a country with a 12.7
percent unemployment rate. A Bank
of America Merrill Lynch report predicted last year that youth unemployment
could jump from 33.5 to 42 percent by 2030.
Prince Mohammed is banking on continued public support for
his economic and social reforms, and on the fact that once the dust has settled
foreign investors will forget whatever misgivings they may have had about the lack
of due process and absence of rule law in the anti-corruption crackdown.
Foreign diplomats in the kingdom noted that the businesses of those detained or
penalized continued to operate and that no foreign interests were caught up in
the purge.
However, to maintain his popularity, Prince Mohammed will
have to manage expectations, deliver jobs, continue to massage the pain of
austerity and the introduction of a new social contract, and ensure that the
public continues to perceive his purge as an anti-corruption campaign in which
the high and mighty are no longer above the law.
A legal battle with Prince Al-Waleed that publicly puts to
the test the government’s assertions could upset the apple cart. That may be
the leverage Prince Al-Waleed hopes will work in his favour as he negotiates
his settlement from the confines of the Ritz Carlton.
Dr.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture,
and co-host of the New Books in
Middle Eastern Studies podcast. James is the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with the same title as well as Comparative
Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North
Africa,
co-authored with Dr. Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and Shifting Sands, Essays on Sports and
Politics in the Middle East and North Africa.
You really need to reformat the appearance of your otherwise excellent blog as it is very hard to read. Make the font bigger, lose the black background, and all that soccer stuff at the beginning put it to the side and not on top so that people don't have to toggle way down the page for the main story.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment. I'll see what I can do
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