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Wednesday, June 19, 2013  

Nayef worked to crush terror
RIYADH Saudi Arabia’s powerful crown prince Nayef Bin Abdul Aziz was a long-serving interior minister who led an iron-fisted crackdown on Al Qaeda.

Nayef, 79, was seen as more conservative than his half brother Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia, and a pragmatist who liked to describe himself as a soldier under the command of the Saudi monarch.

Nayef, who was recently abroad for medical treatment, “died outside the kingdom,” said Al Ekhbariyah Television, quoting a statement from the royal court.

He was shown on television in Geneva three days ago greeting supporters.

According to experts on the Saudi monarchy, Nayef was treated abroad in April for cancer.

He was heir to the Saudi throne for less than a year, having been named crown prince late last October after the death of his brother Sultan. The crown prince was known for his solid relations with the kingdom’s religious elite and was believed to have opposed reforms that could liberalise the Gulf’s society.

He was known for his suspicion and mistrust of Iran, and had pushed for hardline policies towards the nation.

Interior minister for more than three decades, Nayef enjoyed strong relations across the Arab region.

Diplomats said he played a key role in Riyadh’s decisions to host Tunisia’s ousted strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali after his January 2011 overthrow, and to send troops in March last year to Bahrain to help end protests.

Born in the western city of Taif in 1933, Nayef was quickly pushed into public service, being named governor of Riyadh when he was barely 20.

His elder brother Fahd brought him into the interior ministry, where he was named deputy minister in 1970 and minister five years later, when Fahd became crown prince.

Nayef was credited for the successful crackdown on Al Qaeda militants in subsequent years, halting their wave of bloody attacks on the kingdom between 2003 and 2006.

His internal security campaign forced Al Qaeda leaders and many members to flee to southern neighbour Yemen, where they formed Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), which continued to threaten Saudi interests.

Charged with managing the country’s borders, its internal crime-fighting apparatus and the internal intelligence force the mabahith, Nayef dismantled charities which used to collect donations for the late Osama Bin Laden and his extremist network.

Nayef’s son Prince Mohammed, who is the assistant interior minister and the kingdom’s top counter-terrorism official, escaped assassination in 2009 when a suicide bomber from Yemen tried to kill him.

In recent years he transferred day-to-day security responsibilities to Mohammed, who has been even more methodical in pursuing radicals and battling their ideology.

But critics accused Prince Nayef of targeting democracy and human rights activists while neglecting, until recent years, the rise of radicalism in the country.

Saudis, however, showed support and appreciation for the strongman persona Nayef reflected because of public perceptions that he could deliver on national security.

Nayef said early in 2009 that he opposed electing members of the consultative Shura council, or to include women in the group. “I don’t see the need for that,” he said.

Agencies
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