Special Report: U.S. cables detail Saudi royal welfare program

By Simon RobinsonPosted 2011/02/28 at 5:44 am EST

LONDON, Feb. 28, 2011 (Reuters) — When Saudi King Abdullah arrived home last 
week, he came bearing gifts: handouts worth $37 billion, apparently intended to 
placate Saudis of modest means and insulate the world's biggest oil exporter 
from the wave of protest sweeping the Arab world.

But some of the biggest handouts over the past two decades have gone to his own 
extended family, according to unpublished American diplomatic cables dating 
back to 1996.

The cables, obtained by WikiLeaks and reviewed by Reuters, provide remarkable 
insight into how much the vast royal welfare program has cost the country -- 
not just financially but in terms of undermining social cohesion.

Besides the huge monthly stipends that every Saudi royal receives, the cables 
detail various money-making schemes some royals have used to finance their 
lavish lifestyles over the years. Among them: siphoning off money from 
"off-budget" programs controlled by senior princes, sponsoring expatriate 
workers who then pay a small monthly fee to their royal patron and, simply, 
"borrowing from the banks, and not paying them back."

As long ago as 1996, U.S. officials noted that such unrestrained behavior could 
fuel a backlash against the Saudi elite. In the assessment of the U.S. embassy 
in Riyadh in a cable from that year, "of the priority issues the country faces, 
getting a grip on royal family excesses is at the top."

A 2007 cable showed that King Abdullah has made changes since taking the throne 
six years ago, but recent turmoil in the Middle East underlines the deep-seated 
resentment about economic disparities and corruption in the region.

A Saudi government spokesman contacted by Reuters declined to comment.

MONTHLY CHEQUES

The November 1996 cable -- entitled "Saudi Royal Wealth: Where do they get all 
that money?" -- provides an extraordinarily detailed picture of how the royal 
patronage system works. It's the sort of overview that would have been useful 
required reading for years in the U.S. State department.

It begins with a line that could come from a fairytale: "Saudi princes and 
princesses, of whom there are thousands, are known for the stories of their 
fabulous wealth -- and tendency to squander it."

The most common mechanism for distributing Saudi Arabia's wealth to the royal 
family is the formal, budgeted system of monthly stipends that members of the 
Al Saud family receive, according to the cable. Managed by the Ministry of 
Finance's "Office of Decisions and Rules," which acts like a kind of welfare 
office for Saudi royalty, the royal stipends in the mid-1990s ran from about 
$800 a month for "the lowliest member of the most remote branch of the family" 
to $200,000-$270,000 a month for one of the surviving sons of Abdul-Aziz Ibn 
Saud, the founder of modern Saudi Arabia.

Grandchildren received around $27,000 a month, "according to one contact 
familiar with the stipends" system, the cable says. Great-grandchildren 
received about $13,000 and great-great- grandchildren $8,000 a month.

"Bonus payments are available for marriage and palace building," according to 
the cable, which estimates that the system cost the country, which had an 
annual budget of $40 billion at the time, some $2 billion a year.

"The stipends also provide a substantial incentive for royals to procreate 
since the stipends begin at birth."

After a visit to the Office of Decisions and Rules, which was in an old 
building in Riyadh's banking district, the U.S. embassy's economics officer 
described a place "bustling with servants picking up cash for their masters." 
The office distributed the monthly stipends -- not just to royals but to "other 
families and individuals granted monthly stipends in perpetuity." It also 
fulfilled "financial promises made by senior princes."

The head of the office at the time, Abdul-Aziz al-Shubayli, told the economics 
officer that an important part of his job "at least in today's more fiscally 
disciplined environment, is to play the role of bad cop." He "rudely grilled a 
nearly blind old man about why an eye operation promised by a prince and 
confirmed by royal Diwan note had to be conducted overseas and not for free in 
one of the first-class eye hospitals in the kingdom." After finally signing off 
on a trip, Shubayli noted that he himself had been in the United States twice 
for medical treatment, once for a chronic ulcer and once for carpal tunnel 
syndrome. "He chuckled, suggesting that both were probably job-induced."

FOLLOWING THE MONEY

But the stipend system was clearly not enough for many royals, who used a range 
of other ways to make money, "not counting business activities."

"By far the largest is likely royal skimming from the approximately $10 billion 
in annual off-budget spending controlled by a few key princes," the 1996 cable 
states. Two of those projects -- the Two Holy Mosques Project and the Ministry 
of Defense's Strategic Storage Project -- are "highly secretive, subject to no 
Ministry of Finance oversight or controls, transacted through the National 
Commercial Bank, and widely believed to be a source of substantial revenues" 
for the then-King and a few of his full brothers, according to the authors of 
the cable.

In a meeting with the U.S. ambassador at the time, one Saudi prince, alluding 
to the off-budget programs, "lamented the travesty that revenues from 'one 
million barrels of oil per day' go entirely to 'five or six princes,'" 
according to the cable, which quoted the prince.

Then there was the apparently common practice for royals to borrow money from 
commercial banks and simply not repay their loans. As a result, the 12 
commercial banks in the country were "generally leary of lending to royals."

The managing director of another bank in the kingdom told the ambassador that 
he divided royals into four tiers, according to the cable. The top tier was the 
most senior princes who, perhaps because they were so wealthy, never asked for 
loans. The second tier included senior princes who regularly asked for loans. 
"The bank insists that such loans be 100 percent collateralized by deposits in 
other accounts at the bank," the cable reports. The third tier included 
thousands of princes the bank refused to lend to. The fourth tier, "not really 
royals, are what this banker calls the 'hangers on'."

Another popular money-making scheme saw some "greedy princes" expropriate land 
from commoners. "Generally, the intent is to resell quickly at huge markup to 
the government for an upcoming project." By the mid-1990s, a government program 
to grant land to commoners had dwindled. "Against this backdrop, royal land 
scams increasingly have become a point of public contention."

The cable cites a banker who claimed to have a copy of "written instructions" 
from one powerful royal that ordered local authorities in the Mecca area to 
transfer to his name a "Waqf" -- religious endowment -- of a small parcel of 
land that had been in the hands of one family for centuries. "The banker noted 
that it was the brazenness of the letter ... that was particularly egregious."

Another senior royal was famous for "throwing fences up around vast stretches 
of government land."

The confiscation of land extends to businesses as well, the cable notes. A 
prominent and wealthy Saudi businessman told the embassy that one reason rich 
Saudis keep so much money outside the country was to lessen the risk of 'royal 
expropriation.'"

Finally, royals kept the money flowing by sponsoring the residence permits of 
foreign workers and then requiring them to pay a monthly "fee" of between $30 
and $150. "It is common for a prince to sponsor a hundred or more foreigners," 
the 1996 cable says.

BIG SPENDERS

The U.S. diplomats behind the cable note wryly that despite all the money that 
has been given to Saudi royals over the years there is not "a significant 
number of super-rich princes ... In the end," the cable states, Saudi's "royals 
still seem more adept at squandering than accumulating wealth."

But the authors of the cable also warned that all that money and excess was 
undermining the legitimacy of the ruling family. By 1996, there was "broad 
sentiment that royal greed has gone beyond the bounds of reason". Still, as 
long as the "royal family views this country as 'Al Saud Inc.' ever increasing 
numbers of princes and princesses will see it as their birthright to receive 
lavish dividend payments, and dip into the till from time to time, by sheer 
virtue of company ownership."

In the years that followed that remarkable assessment of Saudi royalty, there 
were some official efforts toward reform -- driven in the late 1990s and early 
2000s in particular by an oil price between $10-20 a barrel. But the real push 
for reform began in 2005, when King Abdullah succeeded to the throne, and even 
then change came slowly.

The King, the cable states, had disconnected the cellphone service for 
"thousands of princes and princesses." Year-round government-paid hotel suites 
in Jeddah had been canceled, as was the right of royals to request unlimited 
free tickets from the state airline. "We have a first-hand account that a wife 
of Interior minister Prince Naif attempted to board a Saudia flight with 12 
companions, all expecting to travel for free," the authors of the cables write, 
only to be told "to her outrage" that the new rules meant she could only take 
two free guests.

Others were also angered by the rules. Prince Mishal bin Majid bin Abdulaziz 
had taken to driving between Jeddah and Riyadh "to show his annoyance" at the 
reforms, according to the cable.

Abdullah had also reigned in the practice of issuing "block visas" to foreign 
workers "and thus cut the income of many junior princes" as well as 
dramatically reducing "the practice of transferring public lands to favored 
individuals."

The U.S. cable reports that all those reforms had fueled tensions within the 
ruling family to the point where Interior Minister Prince Naif and Riyadh 
Governor Prince Salman had "sought to openly confront the King over reducing 
royal entitlements."

But according to "well established sources with first hand access to this 
information," Crown Prince Sultan stood by Abdullah and told his brothers "that 
challenging the King was a 'red line' that he would not cross." Sultan, the 
cable says, has also followed the King's lead and turned down requests for land 
transfers.

The cable comments that Sultan, longtime defense minister and now also Crown 
Prince, seemed to value family unity and stability above all.

(Editing by Jim Impoco, Claudia Parsons and Sara Ledwith)



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