Heir to the Saudi throne represents the nation’s progressive youth.
“The country’s authorities are attempting to implement several generations’ worth of reforms”
The youngest crown prince in living memory represents a broader youth revolution in Saudi Arabia.
While the elevation of Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 31, as heir to the throne last month caught the attention, some of his cousins and relatives whose fathers held key posts in past decades have been installed in the royal court as advisers, sent to the US and Europe as ambassadors and appointed to government institutions in Riyadh.
Together, they are some of the world’s most powerful millennials, increasingly in control of a Gulf kingdom where two-thirds of the population is under 35. The challenge will be to sell Prince Mohammed’s “Vision 2030,” his road map to a postoil economy that will require social upheaval and financial sacrifices never experienced by this generation.
“Having young princes at the helm, who understand young people’s needs, is the message being sent,” said Sanam Vakil, associate fellow at Chatham House’s Middle East and North Africa programme. “Perhaps the princes can talk in the same language as the youth and listen to their concerns so they would be able to address them in more effective ways.”
Prince Mohammed is likely to be among his country’s youngest kings with a potential for his rule to last half a century. He joins a roster of youth wielding more power elsewhere. French President Emmanuel Macron is 39, Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump in the US are 36 and 35 and Ireland’s new prime minister is 38. Then there’s North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un. He’s thought to be around 33.
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