Saudis cite foreign links to arrestees

BEIRUT — A recent wave of arrests in Saudi Arabia targeted citizens who were working at the behest of foreign powers to undermine the monarchy, a Saudi government official said Friday.

Saudi Arabia has arrested at least 16 people, and perhaps more than 30, in recent days in a crackdown on people perceived to be critical of the policies of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The detained include prominent clerics, a journalist, a poet, at least two women and a prince, according to their friends, relatives and associates.

Critics of the arrests have speculated that the government wanted to tamp down dissenting voices in the country’s diplomatic spat with Qatar or that the Saudi monarch, King Salman, is preparing to abdicate in favor of his son, Mohammed bin Salman.

The government official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said that the arrests were not aimed at consolidating Mohammed bin Salman’s power, as critics have claimed, but were instead part of a security plan to ensure the kingdom’s stability.

Those arrested had received financial support from two unidentified foreign countries, the official said, and were working with the Muslim Brotherhood and the Houthis, a rebel group that Saudi Arabia is fighting in neighboring Yemen.

Saudi Arabia considers both groups to be terrorist organizations.

The detainees had received foreign support that aimed to destabilize the kingdom as a step toward overthrowing the government in favor of the Muslim Brotherhood, the official said.

The official did not provide the names of any of those arrested, saying that doing so would affect the investigations.

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