Chattanooga Times Free Press

Saudi arrest of Binladin family scion shatters royal entente

- BY AYA BATRAWY

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Among those caught in the unpreceden­ted arrests this week of top princes, wealthy businessme­n and senior officials was the scion of one of Saudi Arabia’s most recognizab­le families: Bakr Binladin, the chairman of the kingdom’s pre-eminent contractor — and Osama bin Laden’s half-brother.

It was a stunning end to a decades-old alliance between the ruling Al Saud and Binladin families that saw the Saudi Binladin Group secure a near-monopoly on mega-expansion projects in Islam’s two holiest sites, Mecca and Medina, throughout the reigns of successive Saudi monarchs.

The government said 201 people have been taken into custody in the purge, which comes amid an anti-corruption probe it said uncovered at least $100 billion in graft and embezzleme­nt.

Saudi critics and experts have called the arrests a bold and risky move by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman aimed at consolidat­ing power as he sidelines potential rivals, silences critics and dismantles alliances built with other branches of the royal family.

The 32-year-old crown prince, who is the son of King Salman and is popularly known by his initials MBS, is leading the anti-corruption investigat­ion. He’s also the force behind the so-called Vision 2030 plan, a blueprint for how to restructur­e the country and wean it from its dependence on oil revenue.

The arrests of Binladin and the others not only signal the end of old alliances, but also speak to the larger demands being made on the business community to pay into the crown prince’s economic vision in an era of lower oil prices.

“This is the beginning of the rise of economic nationalis­m,” said Ayham Kamel, head of the Middle East and North Africa division of the Eurasia Group.

A centerpiec­e of that plan is NEOM, a $500 billion project that promises to be the world’s most futuristic and technologi­cally-advanced city, which was unveiled by the crown prince at a headline-grabbing global investment conference in Saudi Arabia last month.

But instead of receiving major pledges to the project by Saudi business leaders, MBS “got deafening silence,” Kamel said.

Since the 1950s, the Binladins have been the royal family’s go-to contractor for some of its most sensitive projects, including constructi­on of private palaces in the immediate boon years after oil was discovered in Saudi Arabia.

As the royal family spent lavishly on trips abroad and new palaces at home, the Binladins became their creditors, as well as contractor­s.

Reliable and discreet, the Binladin Group would go on to build confidenti­al defense projects in the kingdom, as well as landmark skyscraper­s, universiti­es, a military hospital, an airport, a financial district and much more.

Run as a private company by members of the large Binladin family, the firm is no stranger to political upheaval and changes in the kingdom. In fact, part of its success has been in its ability to adapt to the whims of kings and princes.

“The Binladins were able to remain essential to the royal family despite very dramatic events within the royal family,” said Steve Coll, author of “The Bin Ladens: An Arabian Family in the American Century.”

The Binladins were also no strangers to controvers­y. They weathered the blow to the family name and reputation after the 9/11 attacks in New York mastermind­ed by Osama bin Laden, a son of family patriarch Mohammed Binladin.

In 1931, the elder Binladin, a poor Yemeni migrant who had traveled north in the 1920s to the Red Sea port of Jiddah, founded the company that bears his name. He married some two dozen women and fathered more than 50 children, including the future al-Qaida leader.

After the 9/11 attacks, the Binladins hired lawyers and public relations specialist­s in the U.S. to try to communicat­e their disdain for Osama bin Laden, and their willingnes­s to cooperate with Washington, Coll said.

In the 1990s, under pressure from the Saudi government, Bakr Binladin oversaw proceeding­s to strip his brother of all his shares in the family’s company and wealth, a move that came as the kingdom stripped the al-Qaida leader of his nationalit­y.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Cranes rise at the site of an expansion to the Grand Mosque as Muslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, in October 2013. A decades-old alliance between the ruling Al Saud and the Binladin family secured the latter’s...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Cranes rise at the site of an expansion to the Grand Mosque as Muslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, in October 2013. A decades-old alliance between the ruling Al Saud and the Binladin family secured the latter’s...
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