Saudi long-serving foreign minister Saud al-Faisal dies
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-33472742 Version 0 of 1. Saudi Arabia's Prince Saud al-Faisal - who was the world's longest-serving foreign minister - has died aged 75. There is no official word on the cause of death. The prince had had a number of surgeries in recent years. He was the kingdom's foreign minister for 40 years, before retiring in April. Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi said the world had lost a "noble" diplomat. Analysts say he was widely respected, and navigated through decades of turbulence in the Middle East. He was regarded as the public face and voice of a country that preferred to conduct its diplomacy discreetly. "Prince Saud al Faisal was a man of great humanity, compassion and wisdom," former British Prime Minister Tony Blair said in a statement. "He worked tirelessly for peace." Saudi Foreign Ministry spokesman Osama Nugali said: "The eye tears, the heart saddens." The son of King Faisal, Prince Saud was born in 1940, and was among the first generation to receive both a traditional and a Western education. Prince Saud studied economics at Princeton University in the US in the 1960s. In 1970, he became deputy governor of the former state-owned natural resources company, Petromin, and the following year was appointed deputy minister of petroleum and mineral resources. He was was appointed foreign minister in 1975. |