King Salman’s kin want to oust him
The prince, himself is a grandson of King Ibn Saud, who founded the ruling dynasty in 1932
By : DC Correspondent
Update: 2015-10-25 01:29 GMT
London: In a shocking revelation on Saturday, eight of the 12 surviving sons of Saudi Arabia’s founding monarch are supporting a move to oust King Salman, 79, the country’s ailing ruler, and replace him with his 73-year-old brother.
The revelation by a dissident prince also claims that a clear majority of the country’s powerful Islamic clerics, known as the Ulama, would back a palace coup to oust the current King and install Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, a former interior minister, in his place.
Quoting the prince, The Independent said: “The Ulama and religious people prefer Prince Ahmed – not all of them, but 75 per cent.” The prince, himself is a grandson of King Ibn Saud, who founded the ruling dynasty in 1932.
Support from the clerics would be vital for any change of monarch, since in the Saudi system only they have the power to confer religious and therefore political legitimacy on the leadership.
The revelation suggests there is increasing pressure within the normally secretive Saudi royal family to bring to a head the internal power struggle that has erupted since King Salman inherited the throne at the beginning of this year.
The prince, whose name could not be revealed for security reasons, is the author of two recently published letters calling for the royal family to replace the current Saudi leadership.