Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal released after Ritz Carlton ‘prison’ video

Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, detained in the kingdom’s sweeping crackdown on corruption, has been released from at the Ritz Carlton hotel in Riyadh, his family has said. 

His reported release came hours after he told Reuters in an exclusive interview at the opulent Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh that he expected to be cleared of any wrongdoing and keep his vast wealth. 

Prince Alwaleed said his suite in Riyadh’s Ritz-Carlton hotel was transformed into a luxurious prison to hold tycoons and royals.

He has been confined there for more than two months along with dozens of other suspects, part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s bold plan to consolidate control and reform oil superpower Saudi Arabia.

It was the first time the prince, one of the nation’s most prominent businessmen, had spoken publicly since his detention.

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Prince Alwaleed said he was continuing to maintain his innocence of any corruption in talks with authorities. He said he expected to keep full control of his global investment firm Kingdom Holding Co without being required to give up assets to the government.

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal out in Riyadh before his imprisonmentCredit:
Reuters

He described his confinement as a misunderstanding and said he supports reform efforts by the crown prince, known as MbS.

Prince Alwaleed was an early advocate of women’s employment in Saudi Arabia and a lifting of the ban on women driving. In September, King Salman ordered that the restriction should be lifted next year.

"There are no charges. There are just some discussions between me and the government," he said in the interview, conducted shortly after midnight. "I believe we are on the verge of finishing everything within days."

Prince Alwaleed appeared grayer and thinner than in his last public appearance, a television interview in late October, and had grown a beard while in detention.

A view shows part of the suite where Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has been detained, at the Ritz-Carlton in RiyadhCredit:
Reuters

"I have nothing to hide at all. I’m so comfortable, I’m so relaxed. I shave here, like at home. My barber comes here. I’m like at home, frankly speaking," he said.

"I told the government I’d stay as much as they want, because I want the truth to come out on all my dealings and on all things that are around me."

The flamboyant prince, in his 60s, is the face of Saudi business for many foreigners, often appearing on international television covering his diverse investments and lifestyle.

A 30-minute interview, including a tour of his suite, was granted largely in order to disprove rumours of mistreatment and of being moved from the hotel to a prison.

A view shows part of the suite where Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has been detained, at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Credit:
REUTERS

Prince Alwaleed showed off the comforts of his gold-accented private office, dining room and kitchen, which was fully stocked with his preferred vegetarian meals.

In the corner of his office sat tennis shoes, which he said he used regularly for exercise. A television played business news programmes, and a mug with an image of his own face on it was perched on the desk.

The release of Prince Alwaleed, whose net worth has been estimated by Forbes magazine at $17 billion, is likely to reassure investors in his global business empire as well as in the Saudieconomy broadly.

Directly or indirectly through Kingdom Holding, he holds stakes in firms such as Twitter Inc and Citigroup Inc , and has invested in top hotels including the George V in Paris and the Plaza in New York.

A view shows part of the suite where Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has been detained, at the Ritz-Carlton in RiyadhCredit:
Reuters

Dozens of princes, senior officials and top businessmen were detained when Crown Prince Mohammed launched his purge in early November, shocking Saudis who never imagined the business elite or royalty could come under close scrutiny.

Allegations against Prince Alwaleed included money laundering, bribery and extorting officials, a Saudi official told Reuters at the time.

He is also known for his outspoken views on politics – making headlines in 2015 when he called Donald Trump a "disgrace" on Twitter during the U.S. election campaign.

The prince said he was able to communicate with family members and executives at his business during his time in detention.

Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal sits for an interview with Reuters in the office of the suite where he has been detained at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaCredit:
 REUTERS

Asked why he ended up held in the hotel and became one of its longest-serving detainees, he said:

"There’s a misunderstanding and it’s being cleared. So I’d like to stay here until this thing is over completely and get out and life goes on."

"We have now a new leadership in Saudi Arabia, and they just want to cross all the Ts and dot all the Is. And I said: ‘Fine, that’s fine with me, no problem at all. Just go ahead.’"

Authorities said they aimed to reach financial settlements with most suspects and believed they could raise some $100 billion for the government this way – a huge windfall for the state, which has seen its finances squeezed by low oil prices.

A view shows part of the suite where Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has been detained, at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaCredit:
REUTERS

In recent days there have been signs the purge is winding down. Several other prominent businessmen, including Waleed al-Ibrahim, owner of regional television network MBC, have been released, an official source told Reuters on Friday. Terms of any settlement were not revealed.

Prince Alwaleed said his own case was taking longer to conclude because he was determined to clear his name completely, but he believed the case was now 95 percent finished.

The prince said he was particularly upset by media reports that he had been sent to prison and tortured.

A view shows part of the suite where Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has been detained, at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaCredit:
 REUTERS

"It’s very unfortunate. I was planning to do an interview when I got out, which I think will be imminently.

"But I decided to accelerate the process and accept this interview today because these various rumours took place. They’re unacceptable completely. They are just a bunch of lies."

After freedom, the prince said, he plans to continue living in Saudi Arabia and getting back to the high-paced and complex challenge of juggling his global interests.

"I will not leave Saudi Arabia, for sure. This is my country. I have my family, my children, my grandchildren here. I have my assets here. My allegiance is not on the table."

Shaky start to Syria peace talks in Russia as opposition delegates refuse to leave Sochi airport

A Russian-organised peace conference aimed at ending the war in Syria got off to a shambolic start on Tuesday, after dozens of opposition delegates refused to leave the airport in Sochi and others backed out at the last minute.

Moscow, a staunch Bashar al-Assad ally, is hosting what it has called a Syrian Congress of National Dialogue in the Black Sea resort that it hopes will launch negotiations on drafting a new constitution for Syria after almost seven years of war.

But the conference, which is running in parallel to United Nations-negotiated talks, looked in jeopardy after more than 70 rebel delegates refused to leave the airport until all logos and emblems representing the government were…

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‘We lost everything’ – millions caught between drought and al-Shabaab at risk of famine in Somalia

Mardada Hussein stood outside the bee-hive shaped shelter where she sleeps with her eight children and counted everything she had lost.

“Ten,” she said. “Ten months here. Three years since we had rain. Fifteen cows, ten cattle, and 20 goats – all dead.”

The arithmetic of catastrophe is written large over Somalia’s interior. But it is the fatigue etched in Mrs Hussein’s face, and the tautness in her voice, that conveys the strain of a double catastrophe of war and drought that has forced millions off the land.

For generations, families like Mrs Hussein’s have lived off the land in the Bay region, growing sorghum, a traditional cereal, and raising cattle, camels, and goats.

But agriculture in this…

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Clashes as South Africa’s ANC meet to decide Jacob Zuma’s fate

Rival members of South Africa’s ruling ANC clashed on Monday as the party’s top officials met to decide the fate of embattled president Jacob Zuma.

Demonstrators shouting slogans for and against Mr Zuma hurled bricks and attacked passing vehicles outside the African National Congress’s Johannesburg headquarters.

Mr Zuma, whose tenure has been engulfed by corruption scandals, is due to deliver the annual state of the nation address on Thursday, despite calls for him to step down amid a growing political crisis.

The party announced it will hold an emergency meeting on Wednesday of its decision making body, the National Executive Committee (NEC), in a move that could force the 75-year-old from office after he reportedly refused to resign.

Many members of the party want Mr Zuma to resign immediately, to be replaced by his deputy Cyril Ramaphosa, while the president’s supporters are calling for him to remain in office until his term expires next year.

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Members of the Black First Land First (BLF) sitting in the back of a pick up truck, are attacked by African National Congress (ANC) membersCredit:
AP

Outside the headquarters on Monday, a middle-aged woman groaned in agony a she was repeatedly kicked in the stomach by a senior member of the ruling ANC.

Mr Zuma still commands a loyalist faction, including in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal.

"We are here to defend the state president,” said Abi Letsoalo, from the activist group, Black First Land First who support Mr Zuma’s call to seize white-owned farm land without compensation. “Our message is clear: the president will be the president until his term of office has expired.”

Mr Zuma’s presidency has been dominated by corruption scandals. He faces several court cases, including over 783 payments he allegedly received linked to an arms deal before he came to power in 2009.

Many graft allegations against Mr Zuma have centred on the wealthy Gupta family, who are accused of unfairly obtaining lucrative government contracts and even being able to choose ministerial appointments.

The NEC has the power to oust Mr Zuma with a majority vote. Failing that, it is widely expected that parliament will overwhelmingly support a vote of no confidence against him later this month, which will expel him from office.

Winter Olympics: hopes for peace in a town once terrorised by North Korean commandos

South Korean taxi driver Lee Jin-kyu still recalls his terror the moment he witnessed North Korean commandos coming ashore from a shipwrecked surveillance submarine under the cover of darkness, on a balmy night in September 1996.

Looking out onto the water from the roadside near the city of Gangneung, on South Korea’s east coast, Mr Lee felt a chill of dread when he saw the strange silhouette of what looked like a “dolphin” the size of a bus that had run aground on rocks. “I knew I had to sound the alarm,” he said.

The ensuing 49-day manhunt for the 26 special forces and submarine officers on board left not only 24 North Koreans, and 16 southerners dead, but it nearly brought the two Koreas to…

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Scandal-hit Oxfam could lose millions in EU funding

Brussels will strip Oxfam of millions of euros of European Union funding unless the charity  “urgently” explains its conduct over allegations its aid workers in Haiti paid possibly underage prostitutes for sex parties.

The British charity is facing UK government officials on Monday over the scandal, which could cost it annual payments from Westminster worth £31.7 million last year. 

Oxfam could lose another £29.3 million a year in EU funding, it emerged today after the European Commission said it has a “zero tolerance” approach to any organisation failing to meet its ethical standards.

“The European Commission expects its partners to abide by strict ethical and professional code of conducts and…

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Le mariage ne fait pas nécessairement le bonheur

Une étude américaine affirme que les personnes restées mariées longtemps ne seraient pas plus heureuses que celles qui sont restées célibataires toute leur vie. Une équipe de la Michigan State University a suivi 7.532 personnes âgées de 18 à 60 ans pour le déterminer.

Mener une vie de couple rend-il plus heureux que de rester célibataire à vie ?

De tous les participants à cette étude, 79% sont restés mariés à la même personne la majeure partie de leur vie, 8% sont restés principalement célibataires et non mariés, 13% ont vécu les deux situations, en passant parfois par le divorce et le veuvage.Les chercheurs ont constaté que les personnes mariées ne se déclaraient pas vraiment plus heureuses que les célibataires.Leur estimation de leur niveau de bonheur est de 4 sur 5, contre 3,82 chez les célibataires et 3,7 pour les autres.Publiés dans la revue 

Journal of Positive Psychology, ces résultats laissent donc penser que le mariage ne fait pas forcément le bonheur. Les chercheurs notent que les précédentes études consacrées à ce sujet portaient sur les effets du mariage à un moment précis de la vie ou une période relativement courte, tandis que ce nouveau sondage tente de faire le bilan à un moment plus tardif de la vie.”On peut tout à fait être malheureux en ménage, ou bien être célibataire et apprécier de nombreux aspects de la vie, comme les amitiés, les passe-temps et le travail. Rétrospectivement, si le but est de trouver le bonheur, il semble un peu idiot de tout miser sur le fait d’être en couple“, commente William Chopik, auteur de l’étude.La co-auteure de l’étude, Mariah Purol, ajoute que si l’on est malheureux seul, le fait de se marier ne change pas cela de façon drastique.”Lorsque l’on arrive à trouver le bonheur et l’accomplissement en tant que célibataire, il est vraisemblable que l’on préserve ce bonheur — que l’on porte ensuite une alliance ou non“.Click Here: Golf special

Rock Valley IA Nighthawk Invitational

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St. Croix Falls Wrestling Classic

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14. Northwestern 32.0
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