Prince Talal welcomes
Saudi reform process
Half-brother of King Fahd says entire
Arab world needs to embark on program of change Raed al-Amine
Daily Star staff
BEIRUT: Prince Talal bin Abdel-Aziz, half-brother of Saudi
Arabias King Fahd bin Abdel-Aziz, told the Foreign Press Association in Paris
earlier this week that he welcomed the embryonic reform process getting underway in his
country, but is worried that recent devastating bomb attacks there were intended to bring
down the monarchy.
Prince Talal, president of the Arab Gulf Program for United Nations Development
Organizations, expressed his relief that reforms have started to take effect in Saudi
Arabia, saying such measures are necessary across most of the Arab region.
I am one of several persons who have been demanding reforms for many years.
Therefore, I believe that the hopes and demands of those who have been seeking reforms are
now being realized. This is a good thing. Reforms are not required only in Saudi Arabia
we are in need of democracy and human rights in most of the Arab countries,
he said.
But while welcoming reform, the prince expressed a fear widely held among the Saudi rulers
that terror organizations are now directly targeting their hold on power.
Unfortunately, the terrorist operations that have afflicted Saudi Arabia are
intended to destabilize the regime, he said Tuesday.
Prince Talal called for those who incite violence to be put on trial, including radical
clerics who he named as leading instigators of terror.
One of their theoreticians is a senior sheikh called Sheikh Ali bin Khodeir
al-Khodeir, and there is another who goes by the name of Sheikh Nassir ibn Hamad al-Fahd.
They had been preaching to these individuals and encouraging them to become terrorists by
issuing fatwas (religious rulings) and authoring books to this effect.
A few days ago, we were surprised to see these two men retreating from their fatwas.
Is the fatwa a game? Does this mean that you can issue a fatwa to shed the blood of
people? How many victims fell after they issued these fatwas? How many men, women and
children died because of these fatwas? They must stand trial, he said.
The prince also said the Saudis will turn into human shields to defend their country
against any US attempt to partition it. Prince Talal claimed Saudi Arabia has come to know
through senior US officials that there were plans to partition the region.
Asked whether such reports were mere rumors, Prince Talal replied that US President George
W. Bush had said the US should reconsider its relations with countries that do not have
democratic government. US Secretary of State Colin Powell has also alluded to a possible
reconsideration of the Middle East map, explained the prince.
On the Iraqi issue, he said that what is happening on the ground today could be described
as resistance.
It is quite right to say that this resistances nature is still unknown, but,
no doubt it is mostly an Iraqi one, despite some intruders here and there, penetrating the
borders. On the other hand, we refuse to describe it as resistance when it attacks Iraqi
institutions and interests, he said.
Moving on to other regional issues, Prince Talal had some reflections on Lebanon. He hoped
that sectarianism in the troubled state would disappear some day and a unified
national spirit takes its place, where differences between Christians and Muslims would
vanish.
He saw Lebanon as the lung of the Arab world, a bridge between the East
and the West, and an arena of democracy, freedom and tolerance.
He also mentioned the Palestinian cause, saying it is a flammable issue, and there
are a lot of peace plans being put on the table, but their fate is doomed because we
believe
that the US desired solution to the Palestine-Israeli conflict is the
disastrous Sharonite solution (referring to Israeli PM Ariel Sharon).
He said Palestinian resistance fighters shouldnt be branded terrorists
because that would mean George Washington and Charles de Gaulle were also terrorists. |