Saudi's King Fahd dies
2005-08-01 09:13
Riyadh - Saudi Arabia's King Fahd died on Monday after years of ill health and a turbulent reign that saw the oil-rich kingdom face up to Islamic extremism.
His half-brother, Crown Prince Abdullah, who has been de facto ruler for a decade, was anointed his successor.
Medical sources said that King Fahd, aged in his 80s, died in hospital at dawn.
The king had been admitted to King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh in late May for "medical tests" and was said to be suffering from respiratory problems caused by pneumonia.
Believed to have been born in 1923, Fahd took charge in 1982 of a vast kingdom which is the world's largest petroleum exporter and holds a quarter of global oil reserves.
He guided Saudi Arabia through the most turbulent era in its history, which saw the kingdom survive two Gulf wars only to have to confront the menace of Islamic extremism.
Two years of strife perpetrated by Islamic extremists has claimed the lives of 90 civilians, 42 security personnel and 113 militants, according to official figures.
Cornerstone
Saudi's alliance with the United States, the cornerstone of Fahd's foreign policy, was sorely tested by the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, in which 15 out of the 19 alleged attackers were Saudi.
Designated as next in line after King Faisal's assassination in 1975, Fahd was in practical terms running the country under the rule of his ailing brother King Khaled from 1975 to 1982.
After a stroke in 1995 confined him to a wheelchair, the king delegated the day-to-day business of government to his half-brother, Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz.
Soon after Fahd's death was announced, Crown Prince Abdullah, who himself is in his 80s, was named the next king.
It was Fahd himself who upheld the Saudi tradition of the crown prince succeeding the monarch by asking Abdullah to run the country after suffering a stroke in 1995.
Saudi Arabia's crown prince has traditionally replaced the king on the monarch's death or abdication, but a law introduced by King Fahd opened the door for the succession to skip a generation.
The basic law adopted in 1992 allows the royal family to select a grandson of Abdul Aziz over the 20-odd surviving brothers and half-brothers of King Fahd, passing over Prince Abdullah, who heads the powerful National Guard.
However, sources close to the royal family previously said the princes have all agreed that the sons of Abdul Aziz should continue to succeed in order of age, before the grandsons are given the chance.
Defence minister Prince Sultan is next in line to the throne after Abdullah, and was named crown prince, although rivalry has sometimes been reported between the two men.
The Saud dynasty dates back to the 18th century, when "Lord of the Desert" Mohammad bin Saud joined forces with an austere Islamic reformer, Mohammad bin Abdul Wahhab, and set about propagating by the sword a return to pure Islam. - AP/AFP
- SAPA