Family of ex-Saudi intelligence officer being targeted
The son of a powerful former Saudi intelligence officer
living abroad says members of the family are being targeted back home in a bid
by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) to force his father to return to the
kingdom.
Saad al-Jabri, for years one of Saudi Arabia's leading
intelligence officials, has been fearing for his life since moving to Canada in
2017 and has been resisting pressure from MBS to go back to the kingdom, according
to a New York Times report on Thursday citing his son, Khalid al-Jabri, and
associates.
Khalid told the newspaper that his brother, sister and uncle
have been arrested by Saudi security forces and held incommunicado since March.
"It has been weeks and we don't know where they
are," he was quoted as saying. "They were kidnapped from their beds.
I don't even know if they are alive or dead."
There was no comment by Saudi Arabia.
An expert in artificial intelligence, Saad held a number of
top positions in Saudi Arabia and played a key role in its fight against
al-Qaeda and security coordination with its ally, the United States.
His son and former US officials who worked with him say MBS
wants to force al-Jabri to return to the kingdom as he fears anyone outside of
his control who has access to secret information, the Times reported.
Gerald Feierstein, senior vice president at the Middle East
Institute in Washington, DC who dealt with al-Jabri while serving as the US
ambassador to Yemen, told the newspaper that al-Jabri was acquainted with so
many sensitive issues that he would know "where the bodies are buried",
and possibly unflattering information about MBS.
Al-Jabri's intelligence career came to an end following the
power struggle between MBS and Prince Mohammed bin Nayef (MBN), the former
crown prince. He was out of the kingdom in 2017 when MBN was replaced as heir to
the throne when King Salman elevated his son, MBS, to the role and gave him
wide authority to become the kingdom's de facto ruler.
MBN was put under house arrest at the time, according to
reports. He was arrested in March this year, reportedly because he was
complaining privately about how MBS was running Saudi Arabia.
Al-Jabri, seen as a very close ally of MBN, decided to not
settle in the US despite his deep ties there because he was concerned that the
administration of President Donald Trump would send him back to Saudi Arabia if
MBS requested it, a person briefed on the case told the Times.
The newspaper said when al-Jabri left Saudi Arabia,
authorities began placing restrictions on two of his children who remained in
the country - Sarah, 20, and Omar, 21.
They had planned to study in the US but within hours of
MBS's rise to crown prince, they discovered that they were barred from leaving
the kingdom, according to Khalid al-Jabri.
Their bank accounts were frozen and they were summoned for
questioning and told to encourage their father to come home, he said.
Security forces took them from their beds in their home in
the capital, Riyadh, at dawn on March 16, and the family is growing
increasingly worried as they have not heard from them since.
Last week, authorities also arrested al-Jabri's brother,
Abdulrahman al-Jabri, a US-educated electrical engineering.
Saudi Arabia's human rights record has come under intense
scrutiny following the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the
kingdom's consulate in Istanbul in October 2018.
The CIA and others reportedly believe MBS ordered the
killing of Khashoggi, who wrote opinion columns critical of the crown prince in
The Washington Post. Saudi Arabia denies any involvement by MBS in the case.
Khashoggi's killing has changed the situation for those who
once felt safe abroad, and the al-Jabri family has now hired a Washington-based
lobbying firm to press for the release of the detained relatives.
Gulf Affairs analyst Sigurd Neubauer told Al Jazeera the
detentions are tarnishing Saudi Arabia's international reputation, however, any
release expected from lobbying depends on the upcoming US presidential
election.
"The long game is tied to the US presidential election.
In the event Joe Biden wins, I think that we can see a whole sale of releases
of high profile Saudi dissidents and members of the royal family,"
Neubauer said.
"President Trump has personalised his relationship with
Crown Prince Mohammed, and it is unlikely that any sort of lobbying will sway
him in the immediate to long term. But these developments are unfortunately
only adding to the already severely damaged reputation that Saudi has in the
US."
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