Ravalika Medipally January 24, 2015

The King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia expired on his 90’s yesterday his one and only Crown Prince Salman Bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud made a pledge to continue the predecessor’s policies after ascending the throne. He said that it is his father’s promise to fulfil so.

The current King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has expired at the age of 90 because of some health problem. The news is led out in the late time yesterday on their state television, arrived after the king was appointed to hospital on 31st December who is suffering from pneumonia. His heir is his Crown Prince Salman. On Friday morning the new king pledged to uphold the equal loom as his ancestors.

“We will, with God’s support, maintain the straight path that this country has advanced on since its establishment by the late King Abdulaziz,” Salman said in an interview that is broadcasted on state TV. Abdullah who had been king ever since 2005 and successfully in accuse since his Brother Fahd’s stroke in 1995, established partial change after 2011 in retort to the Arab spring.

Those political parties are accused in that area because of the partial rules held over there. The Prince is broadly trusted to be unwell, with conjecture he is suffering from dementia or Parkinson’s disease, even if Saudis deny that. He is 79, so there is hop to be uncertainty about his rule.

One more issue for Salman will be overseeing Saudi relations with the US, the cause of distress in Riyadh and unthinking moves by Abdullah in 2014 after Obama required to parley a nuclear pact and a wider rapprochement with Iran as well as failing to act militarily beside the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, whose overthrow the Saudis are still in search of.

The Saudi contribution in Obama’s anti-Isis association may have helped relieve tensions. For their nation, Saudis – the king’s official title is “guardian of the two holy places” that the bill themselves as the leaders of the Sunni Muslim world, a part that has taken on amplified implication in the face of the jihadi danger and the atmosphere of sectarianism across the province.

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