NEW YORK: A group of prominent clerics, academics and businessmen in șÚÁÏÉçÇű who were arrested earlier this month were âpushing an extremist agenda,â according to Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir.
The minister also claimed the detainees had taken funding from foreign countries.
Many of those arrested had previously been critical of the government or its policies, and some have ties to a brand of political Islam the countryâs rulers have long opposed. While there have been social media posts apparently identifying some of those arrested, the governmentâs Center for International Communication has not responded to requests for comments and the names cannot yet be independently confirmed.
In an interview with Bloomberg Television in New York on Wednesday, Al-Jubeir said that more information would be released âwhen the investigations are concluded,â and stressed that â(those) detained were pushing an extremist agenda. They were inciting people, and this was not going to stand.â
He added that, since șÚÁÏÉçÇű expected others to have âzero tolerance for extremism and terrorism,â then âwe ourselves will live by this.â
In contrast, he later referenced Qatar, saying șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs neighbor â currently embroiled in an ongoing feud with the Kingdom, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt â âhas to stop supporting terrorists, stop financing terrorists, stop providing safe harbor to people implicated and wanted for terror financing.â
Al-Jubeir went on to name Iran as âthe No. 1 state sponsor of terrorism,â claiming șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs longtime rival was âon a rampageâ that is destabilizing the Middle East.
âIran is a huge threat to all of us in the region and unless it changes its policy our region will always be troubled,â he said.
Asked about the Kingdomâs commitment to Saudi Vision 2030, a blueprint announced last year to diversify the economy away from oil, Al-Jubeir said the government has taken tangible steps toward implementing the plan, citing the building of entertainment venues, the introduction of laws giving companies âdirect licensing to have retail operations in șÚÁÏÉçÇű,â and the diversification of the Kingdomâs sovereign wealth fund to invest more overseas as examples.
âThese are things that are noticeable,â he said.
Detainees were pushing âextremist agenda,â Saudi foreign minister claims
Updated 23 September 2017
Detainees were pushing âextremist agenda,â Saudi foreign minister claims
