Saudi Crown Prince dead

Former Saudi Crown Prince and Interior Minister Nayef bin Abdulaziz (Photo: AFP – Fayez Nureldine)

Published Saturday, June 16, 2012

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz al-Saud has died in Geneva, Saudi state television said on Saturday, citing a royal court statement.

Nayef, interior minister since 1975 and thought to be 78, was the heir to Saudi King Abdullah and was appointed crown prince in October after the death of his elder brother and predecessor in the role, Crown Prince Sultan.

State television said the burial would be in Mecca on Sunday.

His death means the 89-year-old King Abdullah must nominate a new heir for the second time in nine months.

Defense Minister Prince Salman, 76, seen as likely to continue King Abdullah's moderate reforms, has long been viewed as the next most senior prince in the kingdom's succession.

Nayef had a reputation as a steely conservative who opposed King Abdullah's reforms and developed a formidable security infrastructure that crushed Al-Qaeda but also locked up hundreds of political activists without trial.

He was a leading figure in the decision to send Saudi troops into neighboring Bahrain to suppress pro-democracy protests last year.

He, King Abdullah and Salman are among the nearly 40 sons of Saudi Arabia's founder, Abdulaziz ibn Saud, who established the kingdom in 1935.

Salman was made defense minister in November and had served as Riyadh governor for five decades.
Nayef went to Switzerland for medical tests in May.

(Al-Akhbar, Reuters)

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