Here Comes The Saudi Dynasty Succession Crisis ...
REUTERS
The Saudi dynasty is facing its biggest dynastic challenge in 50 years, and Game of Thrones-style cracks are showing in the imminent transition from King Abdullah’s rule.
Liz Sly of The Washington Post details
growing discontent in the royal family after the contentious
appointment of the king’s youngest brother, Muqrin, as the deputy heir.
The choice of Muqrin, a
British-educated fighter pilot who has close ties to the U.S., is
controversial partly because he is the son of a Yemeni concubine who
was never formally married to his father, King Abdulaziz Al-Saud, who
founded the Saudi state in 1932.
“He is not a real prince; his
mother was a slave and there are other brothers who are more competent,”
a former Saudi official told Sly. “Nobody believes Muqrin can become
king.”
The newly-created title
effectively allows Muqrin, 69, to bypass at least two other brothers,
which goes against the unspoken rule that succession passes down
according to age.
King Abdullah is believed to be around 90 and his immediate successor, Crown Prince Salman, is 79. Both are in poor health.
Over the last six decades, the
succession mostly passed brother to brother in order of their age. But
the last of the current line of brothers will die soon, passing power to
the third generation of the family.
Sly explains the problem that consequently arises:
"Given that there are scores of
princes in [the third generation], the potential for discord is high.
Whoever inherits the throne is likely to anoint his own brothers as
future heirs, thereby cutting out multiple cousins from access to the
throne and the patronage it provides."
Michael B. Kelley Business Insider( Yahoo celebrity)
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