CAIRO,
August 1, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – The new ruler of Saudi Arabia,
King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz, has behind him long years of experience
and special characteristics that would undoubtedly ensure him a firm
grip on the helm and enable him to ride out potential storms, but
major challenges facing his rule would also put his potentials to the
test.
Born
in 1924, King Abdullah has been fed on politics and deeply inspired by
his late father King Abdul Aziz, who founded modern-day Saudi Arabia
in 1932.
His
communication with scholars and intellectuals at a very young age has
also expanded his horizons and polished up his skills.
Abdullah,
who was pronounced king after King Fahd passed away Monday, August 1,
is the 13th son of King Abdul Aziz.
His
mother belongs to the powerful Shammar tribe which trained him as a
warrior after he completed a religious education.
After
proving his mettle, Abdullah was picked as the leader of the National
Guards in 1964 and has since worked on modernizing the military
establishment into an umbrella body of military, medical, cultural,
social and housing entities for the welfare of the armed forces and
the Saudis.
In
1975, King Khaled Bin Abdul Aziz named him deputy prime minister while
retaining his National Guards post.
The
quietly-spoken Abdullah has further been running the kingdom's
day-to-day affairs since Fahd suffered a stroke in 1995, making him
the de facto ruler.
It
was Fahd himself who upheld the Saudi tradition of the crown prince
succeeding the monarch by asking Abdullah to run the country’s
affairs.
Saudi
Arabia's crown prince has traditionally replaced the king on the
monarch's death or abdication, but a law introduced by Fahd in 1992
opened the door for the succession to skip a generation.
The
basic law removed the automatic nature of the succession, stating that
a new king would be chosen by the Saud family as the "most
capable" of the sons or grandsons of King Abdul Aziz.
The
king is not a mere constitutional figurehead, but is expected, in his
role as prime minister, to take important decisions.
Family
Backing
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A
man walks past a shop with posters of Saudi kings. (Reuters)
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King
Abdullah is expected to come across a host of internal and external
challenges that would put his political experience to the test.
Himself
a half-brother of late King Fahd, Abdullah needs the full backing of
the royal family and the so-called “Seven Sadiris” or the full
brothers of King Fahd: Sultan, Salman, Abdul Rahman, Nayef, Turki and
Ahmad.
Sultan,
next in line to the throne after Abdullah, was named the new crown
prince, although rivalry has sometimes been reported between the two
men.
King
Abdullah also does not see eye to eye on with Nayef, the interior
minister, on the reform process, with the latter preferring a
step-by-step approach.
The
royal family today comprises up to an estimated 25,000 members, of
whom around 200 are princes wielding influence.
To
cope with the fast expanding dynasty, an 18-member council comprising
senior family members and chaired by Abdullah was set up in June 2000
to arbitrate in family matters.
Economy
Though
Saudi Arabia sits on a quarter of the world's proven oil reserves and
a key crude exporter, Abdullah faces big state deficits and
unemployment rates.
Saudi
Arabia produces about 9.5 million barrels per day with the capacity
for an additional 1.5 million barrels.
Impressive
literacy figures -- 80 percent of males and 77 percent of females --
are not reflected in the employment market which relies heavily on
some six million expatriate workers.
A
recent survey found 79 percent of Saudis seeing unemployment as the
major challenge facing the government, while less than 10 percent gave
priority to corruption, religious extremism and political reform.
Average
income has also slid back to $8424 a year in 2002 from $18000 in 1981
despite soaring oil prices which filled state coffers.
King
Abdullah established in 2003 an anti-poverty fund after realizing the
grave consequences of unemployment and poverty and how they play well
into the hands of extremists and could be used to recruit terrorists.
Reform
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A
file photo of US President Bush and Abdullah walking in Texas.
(Reuters)
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Hand-in-hand
with the security measures Abdullah instigated tentative political
reforms over the past years.
This
has included the launching of a national dialogue involving various
segments of society, and the holding earlier this year of
unprecedented nationwide elections to pick half the members of
municipal councils.
Human
rights also figured high on Abdullah’s agenda when he was crown
prince.
He
established the National Committee for Human Rights and a Press
Syndicate for the first time in Saudi history.
The
education ministry has also started reforming its curricula in a
process overshadowed by international pressure following the recent
string of terrorist attacks that hit the kingdom.
Feminist
voices have also grown louder in the kingdom with a broad section of
Saudi society – around 90 percent -- opting for empowering women and
giving them more rights, including the right to drive a car.
Anti-corruption
plans and programs have also been introduced to build on the yielding
social and political reforms.
But
the government is facing the challenge of how to strike the right
balance between maintaining security and boosting democracy as the
iron fist approach with extremists, though it paid off and led to the
killing of Al-Qaeda leader in the Gulf, fanned the hatred culture and
prompted extremists to go underground.
When
Al-Qaeda hit the kingdom in May 2003, Abdullah launched a relentless
crackdown on militants, who have directly targeted the Al-Saud regime
as well as Westerners residing in the oil-rich kingdom.
The
police mindset has restricted personal freedoms and almost muzzled
free speech.
Journalists
and writers speaking, for instance to Al-Jazeera channel, face
detention and punishment for expressing their views without a prior
permission.
Analysts
further believe that the reform process and national dialogue should
take into account ethnic and religious minorities in the kingdom,
including Shiites and the Sufis.
The
religious establishment, considered to be one of the regime’s
cornerstones, is also one of the challenges facing Abdullah.
According
to observers, he has to walk a delicate line between the reform
process he champions and the status of the respected establishment and
its influence.
Foreign
Policy
King
Abdullah is also faced with the challenge of improving ties with some
Gulf states.
Relations
with Bahrain, for instance, has soured after it signed a free-trade
agreement with the United States in September of last year.
Saudi
Foreign Minister Saudi Al-Faisal openly criticized the agreement as
undermining the unity of the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
and standing as a stumbling bloc to Gulf economic integration.
A
bridge linking between Qatar and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)
over-passing Saudi Arabia’s territorial waters is also a sticking
point.
Saudis
fear that the bridge might be used by terrorists to infiltrate into
the kingdom.
Saudi
Arabia has further locked horns with the UAE over a border demarcation
agreement signed in 1974.
In
the wider Middle East, Abdullah has been playing a pivotal role and
has embarked on a series of multi-leg tour to enhance bilateral
relations.
Long
considered an Arab nationalist opposed to normalization with Israel,
Abdullah won in March 2002 pan-Arab support for a peace plan offering
Israel normal ties with Arab countries in exchange for withdrawal from
occupied Arab land.
Relations
with Libya have hit all time low after reports that Libyan leader
Muammar Gaddafi had plotted to assassinate Abdullah.
Abdullah
also worked to restore ties with Washington, clouded by the Sept. 11
attacks and charges that Saudi Arabia's Wahhabi ideology fostered
anti-Western violence.
Relations
have further taken a downward trajectory after Saudis refused to
cooperate with the US in its invasion of Iraq in 2003 without a UN
mandate.
The
US Air Force subsequently relocated its Gulf headquarters from the
Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia to Qatar, ending a 13-year
presence in the kingdom.
But
in April, Abdullah paid his second visit in three years to US
President George W. Bush at his Texas ranch, where the two were
pictured walking hand in hand in a strong message that both sides need
one another.