Sultan of Oman dies and is succeeded by cousin

Oman’s Sultan Qaboos bin Said, the Arab world’s
longest serving ruler with a reputation for quiet diplomacy, has died at the
age of 79.
Reports early on Saturday said his cousin, Haitham
bin Tariq al-Said, was being sworn in as the new sultan, ending decades of
speculation over who would succeed the popular ruler.
A former British protectorate in the Arabian
Peninsula, Oman has been ruled by Qaboos ever since a bloodless coup against
his father in 1970 enacted with the help of Britain. He has travelled abroad
for treatment for colon cancer at least twice since 2014 and had just returned
to Muscat from hospital in Belgium.
Qaboos had no children and, following protocol, had
not publicly appointed a successor. A 1996 statute says the ruling family must
choose a successor or the name would come from a sealed envelope left by
Qaboos. The royal family was hurriedly convened over Friday night to discuss
the succession, reports said.
The Omani consitution says the sultan should be a
member of the royal family as well as “Muslim, mature, rational and the
legitimate son of Omani Muslim parents”.
There were believed to be more than 80 eligible
candidates for the throne.
Haitham bin Tariq al-Said, 65, has been heritage and
culture minister since the mid-1990s. He was previously undersecretary of the
ministry of foreign affairs for political affairs and also the first head of
Oman’s football federation in the early 1980s.
His appointment comes as something of a surprise to
Omanis, who widely assumed that the name of 65-year-old deputy prime minister
for international relations and co-operation, Asad bin Tariq al-Said, was in
the sultan’s envelope.
Former military commander Asad was Qaboos’s “special
representative”, fulfilling engagements abroad and making several public
appearances on behalf of the sultan.
A three-day period of official mourning for the
public and private sectors had been declared, state media said. “With great
sorrow and deep sadness … the royal court mourns His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin
Said, who passed away on Friday,” said a statement from the royal court.
State news agency ONA said Qaboos died after “a wise
and triumphant march rich with generosity that embraced Oman and extended to
the Arab, Muslim and entire world and achieved a balanced policy that the whole
world respected”.
While he brooked no dissent, fighting off Dhofar
rebels with Britain’s help, Qaboos ruled with a lighter hand than many Gulf
leaders and transformed the country from a backwater where slavery was legal
and with just six miles of paved roads into a wealthy modern state.
Having played a role in Iran’s nuclear deal with
world powers while preserving its membership in the Saudi-led Gulf Co-operation
Council and facilitating mediation efforts in Yemen’s civil war, Oman’s policy
of “friend to all and enemy to none” means Muscat has emerged as the Gulf’s
discreet mediator. It remains to be seen whether the next ruler will take the
same moderate approach in a region often in turmoil.
Analysts worry about royal family discord, and a
resurgence of tribal rivalries and political instability, at a time when young
hawks have assumed power in neighbouring Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates.