Saudi Sacks Officials over Corruption at Tourism Projects

W460

Senior Saudi security commanders were among a string of officials sacked over graft allegations at tourism projects, state media said Friday, in the government's latest anti-corruption purge.

The sacked officials include the governors of the Red Sea coastal cities of Umluj and Al-Wajh, the head of border security and other local commanders as well as officials from the interior ministry, the Saudi Press Agency said, citing a royal order.

The officials are under investigation for allegedly facilitating encroachment of government lands belonging to tourism projects that are under development along the picturesque Red Sea coast, in the historic city of Al-Ula and in the mountain resort of Abha, it added.

The violations had a "great impact on the completion of the projects" and caused "environmental damage", SPA added without elaborating.

Saudi Arabia, which introduced tourist visas for the first time last year, has unveiled a series of multi-billion dollar tourism projects in a bid to diversify the kingdom's oil-dependent economy.

SPA did not say exactly how many officials were fired, and it identified only a few of them.

It marks the latest government crackdown on what officials describe as endemic corruption in the kingdom. 

In March, Human Rights Watch voiced alarm over the arrest of 298 Saudi officials over corruption allegations, warning of possible "unfair legal proceedings" in an opaque judicial system.

Military and judicial officials were among those arrested over allegations of bribery and embezzlement amounting to a total of 379 million riyals ($101 million), according to the state anti-corruption watchdog.

The watchdog said the arrests came after it criminally investigated 674 state employees, but it neither named any of the suspects nor stated when its probe took place.

A campaign against graft launched in 2017 saw hundreds of princes, ministers and businessmen detained at the luxury Ritz-Carlton hotel in the capital Riyadh.

Many were held there for weeks and most were subsequently released after agreeing significant financial settlements. Authorities said they recovered more than 400 billion Saudi riyals ($107 billion).

The anti-graft sweep led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was labelled by many critics as a shakedown and a power grab.

Comments 1
Thumb canadianleb 21 August 2020, 21:11

maybe Lebanon can learn something about handling corruption.