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King '''Fahad bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud''', [[Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques]], ( 16 March 1920 – 1 August 2005) was the [[King of Saudi Arabia|King]] of the [[Kingdom of Saudi Arabia]], Head of the [[House of Saud]] as well as Prime Minister. One of thirty-six sons of Saudi founder [[Ibn Saud]], and the fourth of his five sons who have ruled the Kingdom ([[Saud of Saudi Arabia|Saud]], [[Faisal of Saudi Arabia|Faisal]], [[Khalid of Saudi Arabia|Khalid]], Fahad, and [[Abdullah of Saudi Arabia|Abdullah]]), Fahd ascended to the throne on the death of his half-brother, [[King Khalid of Saudi Arabia|King Khalid]], on 13 June 1982.
King '''Fahad bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud''', [[Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques]], ( 16 March 1921 – 1 August 2005) was the [[King of Saudi Arabia|King]] of the [[Kingdom of Saudi Arabia]], Head of the [[House of Saud]] as well as Prime Minister. One of thirty-six sons of Saudi founder [[Ibn Saud]], and the fourth of his five sons who have ruled the Kingdom ([[Saud of Saudi Arabia|Saud]], [[Faisal of Saudi Arabia|Faisal]], [[Khalid of Saudi Arabia|Khalid]], Fahad, and [[Abdullah of Saudi Arabia|Abdullah]]), Fahd ascended to the throne on the death of his half-brother, [[King Khalid of Saudi Arabia|King Khalid]], on 13 June 1982.


Fahad was appointed [[Crown Prince]] when [[Khalid of Saudi Arabia|Khalid]] succeeded their half-brother [[Faisal of Saudi Arabia|King Faisal]], who was [[assassination|assassinated]] in 1975. Fahd was viewed as the ''[[de facto]]'' [[prime minister]] during [[King Khalid of Saudi Arabia|King Khalid's]] reign in part due to the latter's ill health.
Fahad was appointed [[Crown Prince]] when [[Khalid of Saudi Arabia|Khalid]] succeeded their half-brother [[Faisal of Saudi Arabia|King Faisal]], who was [[assassination|assassinated]] in 1975. Fahd was viewed as the ''[[de facto]]'' [[prime minister]] during [[King Khalid of Saudi Arabia|King Khalid's]] reign in part due to the latter's ill health.

Revision as of 19:11, 18 September 2009

Fahad bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud
King of Saudi Arabia
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia
File:KingFahdKSA.jpg
5th King of The Modern Saudi Arabia
Reign13 June 1982 – 1 August 2005
(23 years, 49 days)
Bayaa13 June 1982
PredecessorKhalid
SuccessorAbdullah
1st Minister of Education
In Office1953 - 1962
SuccessorAbdulaziz bin Mohammad Al al-Shaikh
6st Minister of Interior
In Office1962 - 1975
PredecessorFaisal ibn Turki I Al Saud
SuccessorNaif bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Burial1 August 2005
IssueFaisal bin Fahad, sultan bin Fahad
Muhammad bin Fahd, Saud bin Fahad
khaled bin Fahad, Abdul-Aziz bin Fahad
HouseHouse of Saud
FatherAbdulaziz

King Fahad bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, ( 16 March 1921 – 1 August 2005) was the King of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Head of the House of Saud as well as Prime Minister. One of thirty-six sons of Saudi founder Ibn Saud, and the fourth of his five sons who have ruled the Kingdom (Saud, Faisal, Khalid, Fahad, and Abdullah), Fahd ascended to the throne on the death of his half-brother, King Khalid, on 13 June 1982.

Fahad was appointed Crown Prince when Khalid succeeded their half-brother King Faisal, who was assassinated in 1975. Fahd was viewed as the de facto prime minister during King Khalid's reign in part due to the latter's ill health.

Fahad suffered a debilitating stroke 29 November 1995, after which he was unable to continue performing his full official duties. His half-brother, Abdullah, the country's Crown Prince, served as de facto regent of the kingdom and succeeded Fahd as monarch upon his death on 1 August 2005.

King Fahad is credited for having introduced the Basic Law of Saudi Arabia in 1992.

Early life

At the age of 11 in 1932, Fahad watched as his father officially founded the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia by signing the Treaty of Jedda.

Fahd's education took place at the Princes' School in Riyadh, a school established by Ibn Saud specifically for the education of members of the House of Saud. While at the Princes' School, Fahd studied under tutors including Sheikh Abdul-Ghani Khayat.

In 1945 Fahad travelled on his first state visit to New York City to attend the opening session of the General Assembly of the United Nations. On this trip Fahd served under his brother, King Faisal, who was at the time Saudi Arabia's foreign minister.

Early political positions

In 1953, at the age of 32, Fahd was appointed Education Minister by his father. Also in 1953, Fahd led his first official state visit, attending the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on behalf of the House of Saud.

Later Fahad would lead the Saudi delegation to the League of Arab States in 1959, signifying his increasing prominence in the House of Saud — and that he was being groomed for a more significant role.

In 1962, Fahad was given the important post of Interior Minister and five years later he was appointed Second Deputy Prime Minister. After the death of King Faisal in 1975, Fahd was named first deputy Prime Minister and Crown Prince.

Family and progeny

King Fahad was married at least four times, but many believe it was a far greater number. He had six sons and an unknown number of daughters. His sons were:

Reign

King Fahd gave money for building mosques throughout the world. The Ibrahim-Al-Ibrahim Mosque, at Europa Point, Gibraltar, which opened in 1997, is one such mosque.

On 25 March 1975, King Faisal was assassinated by his nephew and King Khalid assumed power. Fahd, as next in the line of succession, became Crown Prince and First Deputy Prime Minister. Especially in the later years of King Khalid's reign, Fahd was viewed as the de facto prime minister. When King Khalid died on 13 June 1982, Fahd succeeded to the throne. He adopted the title "Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques" in 1986, replacing "His Majesty", to signify an Islamic rather than secular authority.

Foreign policy

He was a supporter of the United Nations. He supported foreign aid and had given 5.5% of Saudi Arabia's national income through various funds especially the Saudi Fund for Development and the OPEC Fund for International Development. He had also given aid to the needy such as the Bosnian Muslims in the recent Balkan Wars. King Fahd had also been a strong supporter of the Palestinian cause and an opponent of the State of Israel. [1] Fahd was staunch ally of the United States, based on the excellent relations shared by the US and Saudi Arabia in a statement "After Allah, we can count on the United States." [2]

Fundamentalism, Iran, and Islamic education

The Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979 radically transformed the political landscape in the Middle east, as the hereditary monarchy of the Shah of Iran was deposed in favor of a religious autocracy based on Shari'a. In the same year, dissidents seized the Grand Mosque in Mecca, and accused the Saudi royal family of being insufficiently Islamic and so unfit to rule the Kingdom. Fearing that the Saudi nation and the royal family could be at risk of overthrow, and seeking to counter the ascendant revolutionary Iranian-led Shi'ite fundamentalist movement, Fahd spent considerable sums after ascending the throne in 1982 to support Saddam Hussein's Iraq in its war with Iran.[2] He also changed his royal title to "custodian of the two holy mosques", and took steps to support the conservative Saudi religious establishment, including spending millions of dollars on religious education, further distancing himself from his inconvenient past.[3]

Recreational Activities

At the same time as King Fahd presided over a more strict Islamic policy at home he was known to enjoy luxurious living abroad, even in ways that would not be allowed in his own kingdom. He visited the ports of the French Riviera, in his 147-metre (482 ft) yacht, the $100 million Abdul Aziz. The ship featured two swimming pools, a ballroom, a gym, a theater, a portable garden, a hospital with an intensive-care unit and two operating rooms, and four American Stinger missiles.[4] The king also had a personal $150 million Boeing 747 jet, equipped with his own fountain. In his visits to London he reportedly lost millions of dollars in the casinos and even was known to circumvent the curfew imposed by British gaming laws by hiring his own blackjack and roulette dealers to continue gambling through the night in his hotel suite.[5] The King was also a usual at the Spanish city of Marbella, where he would bring an entourage of 3000 people, renting 300 hotel rooms and 100 cars. His yearly visit would inject from 50-100 million dollars into Marbella's economy. The King's death in 2005 was mourned in the city.

Persian Gulf War, 1991

After Iraqi forces under Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, placing the Middle East's largest Army at the time, on the border of Saudi Arabia. King Fahd agreed to host coalition troops, led by the United States, in his Kingdom, and later to allow American troops to be based there. This decision brought him considerable criticism and opposition from his people who objected to the presence of foreign troops on Saudi land, and is a casus belli against the Saudi royal family prominently cited by Osama bin Laden and Al-Qaeda.

Reform and industrialization

In regards to reform, King Fahd showed little tolerance for reformists. In 1992, a group of reformists and prominent Saudi intellectuals petitioned King Fahd for wide ranging reforms, including widening political representation, and curbing the royal family's wasteful spending. King Fahd first responded by ignoring their requests and when they persisted, reformists were harshly persecuted, imprisoned and fired from their jobs.

During King Fahd's rule, the royal family's lavish spending of the country's wealth reached its hight. In addition, the biggest and most controversial military contracts of the century, the Al Yamamah was signed under his watch. The contract has cost the Saudi treasury more than $90 billion. These funds were originally allocated to building hospitals, schools, universities and roads. As a result, Saudi Arabia has endured a stagnation in infrastructure development from 1986 till the 1999 when the new King, Abdullah, became fully in control.

Like all the countries overlooking the Persian Gulf, Saudi Arabia under King Fahd has focused its industrial development on hydrocarbon installations. Up to this to this day, the country is reliant on imports for nearly all its light and heavy machinery.

Rule after the 1995 stroke

King Fahd suffered a debilitating stroke in 1995 and became noticeably frail, and decided to delegate the running of the Kingdom to Crown Prince Abdullah. After his stroke King Fahd was mostly inactive, though he still attended meetings and received selected visitors. In November 2003, according to government media, King Fahad was quoted as saying to "strike with an iron fist" at terrorists after deadly bombings, although he could hardly utter a word because of his debilitating stroke and deteriorating health. However, it is Crown Prince Abdullah who took official trips; when King Fahd traveled it was for vacations, and he was sometimes absent from Saudi Arabia for months at a time. When his oldest son and International Olympic Committee member Prince Faisal bin Fahd died in 1999, the King was in Spain and did not return for the funeral.[6]

Death

King Fahd was admitted to the King Faisal Specialist Hospital in the capital, Riyadh on 27 May 2005 for unspecified medical tests. An official (who insisted on anonymity) told the Associated Press unofficially that the king had died at 7:30 EDT on 1 August 2005. A member of the cabinet publicly announced his death on Saudi TV the same morning, and said that he died of pneumonia and a high fever.

Funeral

He was buried in the last thobe (traditional Arab robe) he wore. Fahd’s body was carried to Imam Turki bin Abdullah Mosque, and funeral prayers were held at around 3:30 local time (12:30 GMT). The prayers for the late monarch were led by the Kingdom’s grand mufti, Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al Sheikh.

The "funeral prayer", during which mourners remain standing, was recited after afternoon prayers. The ceremony was replicated in other mosques across the vast kingdom, where the "prayers for the absentee" were held.

The body was carried by King Fahd's son, Prince Abdul Aziz bin Fahd, to the mosque and to the Al-Oud cemetery some two kilometers away, a public cemetery where Fahd’s four predecessors and other members of the Al Saud ruling family are buried.

Arab and Muslim dignitaries who attended the funeral were not present at the burial. Only ruling family members and Saudi citizens were on hand as the body was lowered into the grave.

Muslim leaders offered condolences at the mosque, while other foreign dignitaries and leaders who came after the funeral paid their respects at the royal court.

In line with the family and official state religion, Islam, Saudi Arabia did not declare a national mourning period. Also, all government offices and public buildings were open as usual and the state flag was not lowered (since the flag of Saudi Arabia bears the shahadah, the Islamic declaration of faith, lowering the flag to half mast would be considered blasphemous[original research?]).

After his death, many countries declared mourning periods. India declared a national day of mourning. Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Syria, Yemen, the Arab League in Cairo, and the Palestinian Authority all declared three-day mourning periods. Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates declared a seven-day mourning period and ordered all flags flown at half-staff. In Jordan, a national three-day mourning period was declared and a 40-day mourning period was decreed at the Royal Court.

Many foreign dignitaries attended the funeral, such as Vice President Dick Cheney, President Jacques Chirac. King Juan Carlos, Prince Charles, President Pervez Musharraf, King Abdullah II, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and the Singapore Senior Minister, SM Goh Chok Tong, Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya.

Wives

  • HH Princess AL Anood Bint Abdulaziz Bin Mousad AL Saud mother of Prince Faisal Bin Fahad
  • HH Princess AL Joharah Bint Ibrahem AL Ibrahem mother of Prince Abdulaziz Bin Fahad

See also

Soccer tournaments

References

  1. ^ "Palestine-Israel Issue - King Fahd Bin Abdul Aziz". Retrieved 2009-01-01. {{cite web}}: External link in |authorlink= (help)
  2. ^ Obituary: King Fahd, BBC News, 1 August 2005. Accessed 10 June 2008.
  3. ^ Wood, Paul. Life and legacy of King Fahd, BBC News, 1 August 2005. Accessed 10 June 2008.
  4. ^ Simons, Geoff, Saudi Arabia, St. Martins, (1998), p.28
  5. ^ Marie Colvin, `The Squandering Sheikhs, Sunday Times, 29 August 1993
  6. ^ Saudi Arabia's King Fahd Dies; Abdullah Named New Leader, New York Times, 1 August 2005. Accessed 11 June 2008.
Fahd of Saudi Arabia
Born: 1921 Died: 2005
Preceded by King of Saudi Arabia
1982 – 2005
Succeeded by
Head of the House of Saud
1982 – 2005


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