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Showing posts with label Saudi royalty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saudi royalty. Show all posts

Friday, March 15, 2013

Saudi’s Prince Faisal commends Filipino work ethic


I am a Filipino and I am proud of it, so much that in a country where republican sentiments reign supreme and the virtues of democracy are lectured from inside the classroom out to the streets, I keep on preaching my devoutness to royalty and the virtues in stands for. Lol.

Enough with the sentiments. I am just happy that another royal hailed my fellowmen.
After Prince Philip gave his “joke” of appreciation to Filipino nurses in London, now, it’s Prince Faisal’s turn to commend Filipinos for their “efficiency and hard work” that “has contributed to the national development of both Saudi Arabia and the Philippines.”

Prince Faisal bin Salman was the newly appointed governor of Madinah and son of the current Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia.

The Ambassador of the Philippines to Saudi Ezzedin H. Tago congratulated to the Prince for his appointment to the position and thanked the Prince for the “excellent treatment accorded to OFWs in Madinah who are mostly nurses and other medical workers and to Filipino students in the region studying Arabic, Islamic law and theology,” reports Arabnews.com.





Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Saudi’s Princess Seeta dies

Princess Seeta bint Fahd Al-Damir, mother of Asir Governor Prince Faisal bin Khaled, died on Tuesday. She was 90. Funeral prayers for the late princess will be held at Imam Turki bin Abdullah Mosque in Riyadh on Wedhesday after Asr prayers, the Royal Court said.

Saudi’s Prince Turki Bin Sultan passes away

Prince Turki bin Sultan
Prince Turki bin Sultan, supervisor of the Saudi sports channels, had passed away. No official statement as of yet has been released, but sources could reveal that he died at the Military Hospital in Riyadh. He held numerous government posts, including as director of the press section in the Ministry of Culture and Information’s foreign information department, foreign information advisor at the same ministry, and assistant deputy minister of Culture and Information for planning and studies affairs in 1990, before taking his latest role in 1996.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

BBC: Saudi Arabia's king appoints new interior minister


Prince Mohammed, Saudi Arabia's new Interior Minister 
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah has appointed Prince Mohammed bin Nayef bin Abdul Aziz as minister of the interior, reports BBC. Prince Mohammed, who is in his early 50s, replaces his uncle, Prince Ahmed bin Abdul Aziz, less than five months after he took up the post. A decree said Prince Ahmed - one of the king's half-brothers - was relieved of his position "at his own request". Prince Mohammed has for years been responsible for counter-terrorism activities at the interior ministry. He  seen by Western powers as having effectively led the crackdown on Islamist militants in the Gulf state since 11 September 2001.  In 2009, the prince was targeted by a suicide bomber from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, but escaped with only minor injuries.


Prince Mohammed's appointment lifts him into a critical role that has until now only been held by the current ruling generation. As interior minister, Prince Mohammed will control the police, a highly developed and well funded intelligence apparatus, numerous special forces units and elite counter-terrorism squads, border protection forces, critical installation protection forces and the religious police, known as the "mutawa".

Who is Prince Mohammed?

Sebastian Usher, Arab affairs analyst for BBC News writes:

"Prince Mohammed has been a powerful figure in Saudi Arabia for years. As security chief, he was targeted for and only just survived an assassination attempt. But perhaps the most significant thing about him is his age. He is in his early 50s - in marked contrast to the men in their 70s and 80s who have been running Saudi Arabia for years. It is an indication that a long-awaited shift to a younger generation of leaders may finally have started. The sudden announcement of his appointment is also unusual in Saudi Arabia - which is known for trying to avoid surprises, political or otherwise. There is speculation the US in particular has been unhappy with the recent handling by the Saudis of the possibility of blowback from its citizens going to fight as jihadists in Syria and Yemen, as well as concern at what has been seen as a heavy-handed response to a small but persistent protest movement in the mainly Shia eastern area of Qatif.
"He served 13 years as assistant minister under his father, Crown Prince Nayef, who was interior minister for 37 years until his death in June, and was then promoted to deputy minister under Prince Ahmed."

Friday, July 30, 2010

King Abdullah ends Mid-East tour

The Saudi king meets the king of Jordan during the last leg of his Mid-East visit.
July 31 - Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al-Saud officially ended his brief but whirlwind visit to four neighboring countries: Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, and Jordan. The King’s tour aimed of promising peace in the Middle East amidst the rising tensions in Lebanon. 



See also:

A History of Saudi Arabia  Saudi Arabia: History of Saudi Arabia, Geography of Saudi Arabia, Politics of Saudi Arabia, Human rights in Saudi Arabia, Human trafficking in Saudi Arabia The History of Saudi Arabia The History of Saudi Arabia (The Greenwood Histories of the Modern Nations)