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Begum Nusrat Bhutto dies in Dubai

Saudi crown prince’s death sparks succession talk

he death of the octogenarian heir to the Saudi throne was expected Saturday to position a committed conservative who is a reliable, if choleric, ally of the United States as the ruler-in-waiting within the dynastic Saud family.

Crown Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz died in New York late Friday, according to the Saudi Press Agency, which did not specify a cause of death. Leaked U.S. diplomatic cables from 2010 said that Sultan, who was at least 80 and perhaps as old as 85, was being treated for colon cancer.

King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz, possibly in consultation with the Allegiance Council, a 33-member group of senior figures from the Saud family, will choose his successor. And both family tradition and recent political developments suggest that the leading candidate is Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz, the interior minister who has been acting as de facto crown prince during Sultan’s prolonged illness and absences overseas for treatment.

A state funeral is planned for Tuesday in Riyadh for Sultan, the longtime defense minister who was in charge at the time of the first Gulf War. A possible successor to his Defense Ministry post is Sultan’s deputy and son, Prince Khaled.

“As Minister of Defense and Aviation for almost 50 years, Crown Prince Sultan dedicated himself to the welfare and security of his people and country and was a valued friend of the United States,” President Obama said in a statement.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was traveling in Central Asia when the news broke, praised the crown prince as a “good friend to the United States over many years, as well as a tireless champion for his country.”

Clinton declined to speculate about who might be named to replace him. “I do not think it’s appropriate to comment on what will be an internal decision by the kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” she said, “except to conclude by saying that our relationship with Saudi Arabia is strong and enduring.”

Middle East experts said they believe that Nayef’s ascension to the formal title of crown prince appears inevitable and is unlikely to prompt any major changes in the kingdom.

“Sultan has been sick for a long time, and I think the royal family has all but designated Nayef as his successor,” said Jon B. Alterman, the director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “People have assumed that Nayef was effectively the crown prince for a number of years, so there is no immediate change.”

 

Qadhafi body has bullet hole, burial within 24 hrs

MISRATA, Libya: Former Libyan leader Muammar Qadhafi will be buried according to Muslim rites within 24 hours, a Libyan transitional government force commander said on Friday, and witnesses said the body bore a visible bullet hole in the head.

 

 

 

 

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