Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah appoints moderates to key posts

February 18, 2009 by SAF Desk  
Filed under News at a glance

By Jeffrey Fleishman

Reporting from Cairo — King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia weakened the hold of Islamic hard-liners Saturday by appointing the first woman to a ministerial post and dismissing a leading fundamentalist cleric and the head of the nation’s powerful religious police.

The surprising government reshuffle indicated that the 84-year-old monarch was frustrated with the pace of reform in a kingdom uneasily balanced between moderates and ultra-conservatives. By broadening the voices of modern Islamic thinkers, King Abdullah apparently is trying to refashion the religious establishment at a time the country faces the global financial crisis and renewed threats from Al Qaeda militants.

The king dismissed Sheik Ibrahim Ghaith as head of the Commission of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, which oversees the religious police who arrest those deemed to flout religious edicts, such as women not properly veiled. The monarch also removed Sheik Saleh Lihedan as chief of the country’s highest religious tribunal. In September, Lihedan issued a fatwa saying it was permissible to kill TV executives for broadcasting “evil” and immoral programs.
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Rehabilitated Saudi Terrorists Return to Jihad

February 4, 2009 by SAF Desk  
Filed under News at a glance

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Eleven Saudis who were released from Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and then passed through a Saudi rehabilitation program for former jihadists are now believed to have fled the country and joined terrorist groups abroad, Saudi officials said Tuesday.

The 11 former detainees include two who were already identified last month as members of a Yemeni terrorist group. Their names were on a list of 85 wanted terrorism suspects made public Tuesday by the Saudi Interior Ministry.

The announcement further underscored the difficulties faced by the Obama administration as it prepares to close the Guantánamo detention center. All told, 14 Saudis now appear to have rejoined terrorist groups after their return from Guantánamo, including the 11 living abroad and 3 who were rearrested in Saudi Arabia after their return.

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