The Saudi king on Saturday dismissed the chief of the religious police and a cleric who condoned killing the owners of TV networks that broadcast “immoral” content, signaling an effort to weaken the country’s hardline Sunni establishment.
The shakeup — King Abdullah’s first since coming to power in August 2005 — included the appointment of a female deputy minister, the highest government position a Saudi woman has attained. New judges were also named and the Consultative Council — an appointed advisory body — was reshuffled.
Saudi Arabia’s king does not have unlimited power, rather he has to take into account the sentiments of the sprawling ruling family as well as that of the powerful religious establishment, which helped found the state nearly a century ago.
For Abdullah to finally be able to make these changes shows that he has built the necessary support and consensus in the religious elite and in the ruling family.
The religious establishment has come under persistent criticism, in particular, because of the actions of the judiciary and the religious police. Agents of the moral police are responsible for ensuring women are covered and men go to mosques for prayer, among other things, but many Saudis say they exploit their broad mandate to interfere in people’s lives.
The changes help to dilute the influence that hardliners have had for decades. The king, who has promoted moderation and interfaith dialogue, has brought in a group of relatively young officials and scholars.
“This is the true start of the promises of reform,” said Jamal Khashoggi, editor of Al-Watan newspaper and an experienced observer of the kingdom’s politics. “They bring not only new blood, but also new ideas … They are more moderate and many are also close to the reform agenda of the king, having worked closely with him.”
The delay in making these changes could also be in part because the necessary officials and scholars had to be trained for the job.
“The people now in charge are not being ordered to implement reform,” Khashoggi said. “They believe in reform.”
The king also made changes to the makeup of an influential body of religious scholars known as the Grand Ulama Commission. Under the changes, its 21 members will now represent all branches of Sunni Islam, instead of the single strict Hanbali sect that has always governed it.
Noura al-Fayez has been appointed deputy minister for girls’ education — the first time a woman has been appointed a deputy minister.
That shift will for the first time give more moderate Sunnis representation in the group, whose duties include issuing the edicts known as fatwas.
Abdul-Aziz bin Humain will replace Sheik Ibrahim al-Ghaith as head of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, which runs the religious police, the agency said.
Bin Humain, who is believed to be more moderate than his predecessor, will head a body whose agents have been criticized by Saudis for their harsh behavior.
Asked about the complaints, bin Humain sidestepped the question, telling al-Arabiya TV: “We will seek to achieve the aspirations of the rulers.”
The changes came on Valentine’s Day, a busy time for the religious police, which is entrusted with ensuring that no one marks the banned holiday. As they do at this time every year, its agents target shops selling gifts for the occasion and items that are red or suggest the holiday are removed from the shelves. Some salesmen have been detained for days for infractions.



