SAUDI Arabia’s King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz died yesterday Friday, the 23rd of January 2014
and was replaced by Crown Prince Salman, the OPEC-kingpin’s royal court said in
a statement.
The late monarch’s half brother Moqren was named crown
prince, according to the statement.
King Abdullah, believed to be around 90 years old, was
hospitalised in December suffering from pneumonia and had been breathing with
the aid of a tube.
He died on Friday “at 1:00 am (2200 GMT)” and was
buried later in the day following afternoon prayers.
In recent years, his advanced age and poor health had raised
concerns about the future leadership of one of the world’s key oil producers.
Salman had been representing the king at most recent public
events because of the monarch’s poor health.
Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz on January 5,
2014 in Rawdat al-Khuraim. Photo: AFP/FileNewsnewnn
In March 2014, King Abdullah named his half-brother Prince
Moqren as a second crown prince, in an unprecedented move aimed at smoothing
succession hurdles.
Moqren, who was born in 1945, is the youngest of Abdulaziz’s
sons.
Since the death in 1952 of King Abdulaziz al-Saud, the
founder of Saudi Arabia, the throne has systematically passed from one of his
sons to another.
But many of them are old or have died. The former crown
princes Sultan and Nayef died in 2011 and 2012 respectively.
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