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Saudi Arabia's King Fahd dies at
84
Riyadh -
Saudi Arabia's King Fahd, who moved his country closer to the United
States but ruled the world's largest oil producing nation in name only
since suffering a stroke in 1995, died early Monday, the Saudi royal
court said. He was 84.
Crown Prince Abdullah, the king's
half brother and Saudi Arabia's de factor ruler, was appointed the
country's new monarch.
"With all sorrow and sadness, the
royal court in the name of his highness Crown Prince Abdullah bin
Abdul Aziz and all members of the family announces the death of the
custodian of the two holy mosques, King Fahd bin Abdul Aziz,"
according to a statement read on state-run Saudi TV by the country's
information minister.
Fahd
died at approximately 2:30 a.m. EDT, a senior Saudi official in
Washington told The Associated Press. President Bush was alerted
within minutes of Fahd's death, the official said on condition of
anonymity. The king's funeral was to be held Tuesday evening, he said.
Saudi TV, which said the king was 84
years of age, broke with regular broadcasting to announce Fahd's
death. Quranic verse recitals followed the announcement by the
minister, Iyad bin Amin Madani, whose voice wavered with emotion as he
read the statement.
Madani
said only that the king, whose exact date of birth wasn't known, died
of an illness.
Fahd
died at the King Faisal Specialist Hospital in the Saudi capital,
Riyadh, where he was admitted on May 27 for unspecified medical tests,
an official at the hospital told The Associated Press on condition of
anonymity because news of the monarch's death had not been officially
announced at the time.
At the time of his widely publicized
hospitalization that caused concern home and abroad, officials said he
was suffering from pneumonia and a high fever.
During his rule, the portly, goateed
Fahd, who rose to the throne in 1982, inadvertently helped fuel the
rise of Islamic extremism by making multiple concessions to
hard-liners, hoping to boost his Islamic credentials. But then he also
brought the kingdom closer to the United States and agreed to a step
that enraged many conservatives: the basing of U.S. troops on Saudi
soil after the 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
In his last years, Fahd was more of a
figurehead than the actual ruler — so he was sidelined as the close
relationship he nurtured with the United States deteriorated after the
Sept. 11 attacks. Fifteen of the 19 hijackers were Saudis, and many in
the U.S. administration blamed kingdom's strict Wahabi school of Islam
for fueling terrorism.
King Fahd's debilitating stroke in
1995 confined him mainly to a figurehead role in the kingdom. Crown
Prince Abdullah has been Saudi Arabia's de facto leader since then and
has led the country's battle against Islamic extremism and terrorism.
Abdullah oversaw the crackdown on
Islamic militants after followers of Saudi-born Osama bin Laden
launched a wave of attacks, beginning with the May 2003 bombings of
Western residential compounds in Riyadh. Abdullah also pushed a
campaign against extremist teaching and preaching and introduced the
kingdom's first elections ever — municipal polls held in early 2005.
And Abdullah — who before coming to
power had not been happy with Saudi Arabia's close alliance with and
military dependence on the United States and Washington's perceived
bias toward Israel — rebuilt the kingdom's ties with the U.S. He
visited President Bush twice at Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas, most
recently in April 2005.
Visitors who saw King Fahd after his
1995 stroke reported he was barely aware of what was going on around
him and could not recognize those who shook hands with him. Foreign
dignitaries usually were allowed brief meetings with him, their visits
lasting only as long as it took to film TV footage for the state-run
stations. He was usually accompanied by close family members to avoid
any potential embarrassment.
On newscasts, the king was shown
seated as he extended his hand to visitors or sipped coffee.
Occasionally, policy statements, comments or speeches were issued in
his name, and he was shown chairing ministerial meetings when Abdullah
was out of town.
Fahd
was proclaimed the fifth king of Saudi Arabia on June 13, 1982, three
years after two events that would fuel the rise of Islamic extremism
in Saudi Arabia.
In 1979, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
founded the Islamic Republic in Shiite Iran and, in the same year,
radical Muslims briefly took over the holy mosque in Mecca,
proclaiming the royal family not Islamic enough to rule.
Those developments, coupled with the
king's reputation as a former gambler and womanizer, made the
liberal-leaning Fahd move toward appeasing the country's powerful
religious establishment, including the morals police who enforce the
strict social codes that oblige women to veil and ban men and women
from mingling.
Saudi Arabia did not want Shiite Iran
to be seen as more Islamic than the Sunni kingdom, birthplace of
Islam. So Fahd took the title "custodian of the two holy mosques" —
referring to Islam's holiest shrines at Mecca and Medina — and he
poured millions of dollars into the religious establishment and into
enlarging fundamentalist universities.
In the 1980s, Riyadh, Washington and
Islamabad mobilized Islam to fight Soviet occupiers of Afghanistan.
Millions of Saudi riyals were donated to that effort and thousands of
Saudis joined the jihad, including bin Laden, in a recruitment drive
encouraged by the government. The king's official biography says Fahd
was "an ardent supporter" of the Afghan mujahedeen.
But after the Soviet withdrawal from
Afghanistan in 1989, Fahd, like U.S. and Pakistani officials, gave
little attention to the mujahedeen, who turned that country into a
training ground for their attacks, including the 9/11 suicide
hijackings.
Earlier in his rule, Fahd was
credited with turning Saudi Arabia into one of the Middle East's most
modern states despite tribal traditions and Islamic fundamentalists'
fears that modernization would dilute Muslims' faith.
In 1985, his nephew, Prince Sultan
bin Salman, went into space aboard the U.S. shuttle Discovery as the
first Arab and Muslim astronaut.
When Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein
invaded Kuwait in 1990 and looked like he also might take Saudi
Arabia, Fahd was persuaded by the United States to allow hundreds of
thousands of U.S. and other Western troops, including women, into his
insular, rigidly Muslim kingdom to face the Iraqis.
The move was sharply criticized by
fundamentalist Muslims who oppose Western influence in the kingdom and
spawned the first potent opposition to Fahd's rule. Demonstrations
were quelled and hundreds of clerics detained. Radicals set off bombs
at two U.S. military posts in Saudi Arabia in 1995 and 1996, killing
25 Americans.
Bin Laden, who had earlier been
stripped of his Saudi citizenship by Fahd's government, was incensed
that the Saudis opted to rely on Western troops he saw as infidels for
protection, spurning his offer to use the mujahedeen who had fought in
Afghanistan to liberate Kuwait. He became even more determined in his
opposition to the Saudi royal family.
The Gulf crisis also cost Saudi
Arabia financially. The U.S. $60 billion bill, coupled with lower oil
prices, forced Fahd to scale back lavish benefits that maintained
citizens' loyalty — like free education, free medical treatment and
free lots for homes and businesses. Finally in late 2004, amid high
oil prices, the Saudi Cabinet declared its first deficit-free budget
in nearly a decade.
The stroke left Fahd with short-term
memory loss and an inability to concentrate for long stretches. Even
before the stroke, Fahd suffered from arthritis, diabetes and a bad
knee. The overweight monarch got around in a wheelchair and used a
cane for short walks in his later years.
He underwent eye cataract surgery
once in 2002 in Geneva and a year later in Riyadh. A few days before
the Geneva surgery, he was operated on to remove a blood clot from one
of his eyes.
Fahd,
the son of the founder of modern Saudi Arabia, King Abdul-Aziz, got an
elementary school education with a heavy emphasis on religion at a
school set up by Abdul-Aziz for his 42 sons.
He loved the good life and traveled
often, enjoying years of high living. But when he was in his late 20s,
he was summoned and told that to maintain his place in the succession
he had to shape up.
In 1953, he became the nation's first
education minister, laying the foundation for a nationwide school
system that grew from 30,000 students to over 3.2 million students
today enrolled in seven universities, 83 colleges and over 18,000
schools throughout the country.
In 1962, he became interior minister
and then crown prince in 1975 when King Faisal was slain by a deranged
nephew. Fahd was de factor ruler during the seven-year reign of his
brother Khaled, a devout and apolitical man, and took the throne
formally at Khaled's death in 1982.
The monarch always appeared in the
traditional flowing white robe and "mishlah" — the camel-colored cape
adorned with spun gold. He was a night-owl who slept during the day
and often opened weekly ministerial meetings near midnight. His short
working hours and centralized style — he insisted on approving even
minor details — left a constant bottleneck of paperwork.
Details about Fahd's private life are
little known, but he is believed to have had three wives and eight
sons. His eldest son, Faisal, died in 1999 of a heart attack. --
Associated Press
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