2015年1月22日 星期四

Saudi Arabia's 'reformer' King Abdullah dies




http://edition.cnn.com/2015/01/22/middleeast/saudi-arabia-king-abdullah-dies/index.html


Saudi Arabia's 'reformer' King Abdullah dies

Saudi State TV: King Abdullah dead at 90 04:00

Story highlights

  •  Funeral services for King Abdullah will be held Friday
  • Analysts are predicting a smooth political transition
  • The next king will be Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz, state television reports
(CNN)Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al Saud died early Friday, according to an announcement on Saudi state TV. He was 90.
Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz was appointed as the new king, state television reported.
State television showed throngs of mourners gathered in Mecca. Services will be held Friday afternoon at the Imam Turki Bin Abdullah Grand Mosque in Riyadh, and many world leaders are likely to pay their respects.
"King Abdullah's life spanned from before the birth of modern Saudi Arabia through its emergence as a critical force within the global economy and a leader among Arab and Islamic nations," U.S. President Barack Obama said in a statement, praising the late king's candor and courage.
    King Abdullah became king of the oil-rich nationa key U.S. ally in the Middle East, in August 2005. But he had been running Saudi Arabia since 1996, after his half-brother King Fahd's stroke.
    In the context of the kingdom's conservative circles, Abdullah was seen as reformer and often came up against the more hard-line clerics.
    Since ascending to the throne, Abdullah took steps toward broader freedoms and invested some of the country's vast oil wealth in large-scale education and infrastructure projects.
    "He was really quite (an) extraordinary figure. He was probably the most progressive and liberal minded king of Saudi Arabia since King Faisal, which is a long time ago, in the early 1970s," CNN'a Fareed Zakaria said about Abdullah, who he described as "much loved."
    "I had the opportunity to meet with him once and what you got a sense of was somebody who really was determined to move his country forward," Zakaria said. "It's a conservative country and a conservative society -- and he kept emphasizing that to me -- but he was very clear in the direction he wanted to go."
     
    However, resistance from conservative factions hindered some of his efforts, leaving many women in particular disappointed by a lack of progress toward greater independence.
    Under Abdullah's leadership, the country slowly squashed al Qaeda, capturing or killing its leaders in the kingdom, forcing the remnants underground and sidelining radical preachers.
    It also took a more prominent role in international affairs.
    Last year, it became the lead Arab nation in a U.S.-led coalition to eradicate the ultraradical ISIS group in Iraq and Syria.
    Analysts are predicting a smooth transition despite the many challenges facing Saudi Arabia, including the rise of ISIS, the crisis in Yemen, and the drop in oil prices.
    "Remember, the last time the price of oil fell like this, the Soviet Union collapsed," said Zakaria. "Now that said, the successor is a very competent man."
    He added: "I don't expect any major shift, but it marks a big change, and we'll have to see what the new king is like."





    沒有留言:

    張貼留言