House of Saud: Difference between revisions

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{{Important}}
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{{Evil_Organization|image = 800px-Emblem of Saudi Arabia.svg.png|fullname = House of Saud|alias = Saudi Royal Family|origin = Saudi Arabia|foundation = 1744|headquarters = Riyadh, Saudi Arabia|commanders = [[Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud]] (''de jure'')<br>[[Mohammad bin Salman]] (''de facto'')|agents = No Information|skills = Bribery<br>
{{Evil_Organization|image = 800px-Emblem of Saudi Arabia.svg.png|fullname = House of Saud|alias = Saudi Royal Family|origin = Saudi Arabia|foundation = 1744|headquarters = Riyadh, Saudi Arabia|commanders = [[King Salman|Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud]] (''de jure'')<br>[[Mohammad bin Salman]] (''de facto'')|agents = No Information|skills = Bribery<br>
Manipulation|goals = Spread Wahhabism worldwide (ongoing)<br>
Manipulation|goals = Spread Wahhabism worldwide (ongoing)<br>
De-stabilize it's main rival, Iran (ongoing)<br>
De-stabilize it's main rival, Iran (ongoing)<br>
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The succession to the Saudi Arabian throne was designed to pass from one son of the first king, Ibn Saud, to another. The next in line, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, is the son of King Salman. The king-appointed cabinet includes more members of the royal family. The monarchy was hereditary by agnatic seniority until 2006, when a royal decree provided that future Saudi kings are to be elected by a committee of Saudi princes.
The succession to the Saudi Arabian throne was designed to pass from one son of the first king, Ibn Saud, to another. The next in line, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, is the son of King Salman. The king-appointed cabinet includes more members of the royal family. The monarchy was hereditary by agnatic seniority until 2006, when a royal decree provided that future Saudi kings are to be elected by a committee of Saudi princes.
House of Saud is a translation of Al Saud, an Arabic dynastic name formed by adding the word Al (meaning "family of" or "House of") to the personal name of an ancestor. In the case of the Al Saud, the ancestor is Saud ibn Muhammad ibn Muqrin, the father of the dynasty's 18th century founder Muhammad bin Saud (Muhammad, son of Saud).
Today, the surname "Al Saud" is carried by any descendant of Muhammad bin Saud or his three brothers Farhan, Thunayyan, and Mishari. Al Saud's other family branches like Saud al-Kabir, the Al Jiluwi, the Al Thunayan, the Al Mishari and the Al Farhan are called cadet branches. Members of the cadet branches hold high and influential positions in government though they are not in the line of succession to the Saudi throne. Many cadet members intermarry within the Al Saud to reestablish their lineage and continue to wield influence in the government.
All members of the royal family have the title of Emir (Prince) but sons, daughters, patrilineal granddaughters and grandsons of Kings are referred to by the style "His Royal Highness" (HRH), differing from patrilineal great-grandsons and members of cadet branches who are called "His Highness" (HH), while the reigning king uses the additional title of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques.
In June 2015 ''Forbes'' listed Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal as the 34th-richest man in the world, with an estimated net worth of US$28 billion. Prince Al-Waleed had a net worth of $20.4 billion in 2014. By 2016, according to the TeleSUR, King Salman "net worth was estimated at US$17.0 billion".
The net worth of the entire royal family has been estimated at well over $2 trillion which makes them one of the wealthiest families in the world if not the wealthiest.
==Criticism==
Due to its authoritarian and quasi-theocratic rule, the House of Saud has attracted much criticism during its rule of Saudi Arabia. There have been numerous incidents, including the Wahhabi Ikhwan militia uprising during the reign of Ibn Saud. [[Osama bin Laden]], a critic of the US, was a critic of Saudi Arabia and was denaturalized in the mid 1990s.
On 20 November 1979, the Grand Mosque seizure saw the al-Masjid al-Haram in Mecca violently seized by a group of 500 heavily armed and provisioned Saudi dissidents led by Juhayman al-Otaybi and Abdullah al-Qahtani, consisting mostly of members of the former Ikhwan militia of Otaibah but also of other peninsular Arabs and a few Egyptians enrolled in Islamic studies at the Islamic University of Madinah. The Saudi royal family turned to the Ulema who duly issued a ''fatwa'' permitting the storming of the holy sanctuary by Saudi forces, aided by French and Pakistani special ops units. According to Lawrence Wright, the GIGN commandos did convert to Islam. Most of those responsible, including Al-Otaybi himself, were beheaded publicly in four cities of Saudi Arabia.
In January 2016, Saudi Arabia executed the prominent Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr, who had called for pro-democracy demonstrations, along with forty-seven other Saudi shia citizens sentenced by the Specialized Criminal Court on terrorism charges.
Since May 2017 in response to protests against the government, the predominantly Shia town of Al-Awamiyah has been put under full siege by the Saudi military. Residents are not allowed to enter or leave, and military indiscriminately shells the neighborhoods with airstrikes, mortar and artillery fire along with snipers shooting residents. Dozens of Shia civilians were killed, including a three year old and a two-year-old child. The Saudi government claims it is fighting terrorists in al-Awamiyah.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman kept his own mother away from his father for more than two years, out of the fear that she would stop the king from giving the power to him. Princess Fahda bint Falah Al Hathleen, third wife of King Salman was said to be in the US for medical treatment. However, according to the US intelligence she was not in the country.
Some Royals have been criticised for various human rights violations, including the [[Assassination of Jamal Khashoggi|death of Jamal Khashoggi]], treatment of workers, and the Yemen war.


==Notable members==
==Notable members==
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*[[Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al Saud]] (deceased)
*[[Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al Saud]] (deceased)
*[[Abdulaziz Bin Nasir Al Saud]]
*[[Abdulaziz Bin Nasir Al Saud]]
*Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (current monarch)
*[[King Salman|Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud]] (current monarch)
*[[Mohammad bin Salman]] (crown prince)
*[[Mohammad bin Salman]] (crown prince)
[[Category:Dictator]]
[[Category:Dictator]]
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[[Category:Extravagent]]
[[Category:Extravagent]]
[[Category:Ableist]]
[[Category:Ableist]]
[[Category:Terrorists]]
[[Category:Misopedists]]
[[Category:Destroyer of Innocence]]