Prince Miteb,Son of late Saudi Arabian king released from detention
 
 Prince Miteb bin Abdul Aziz, son of late Saudi King Abdullah.
Abu Dhabi-Senior Saudi Prince Miteb bin Abdullah has been released after being detained three weeks ago as part of a sweeping "anti-corruption" drive, a source close to the government told CNN.
An undisclosed financial settlement was agreed to secure the powerful prince's release, the source said.    
Prince
 Miteb is the highest-profile detainee to be released after hundreds of 
people, including senior princes and Saudi business magnates, were 
caught up in a wave of arrests on November
Prince Miteb is the son of 
Saudi King Salman's predecessor, the late King Abdullah. Until being 
fired by royal decree, he was head of the kingdom's elite national 
guard, one of three main branches of the country's security apparatus.  
After
 the anti-corruption arrests, the kingdom's top legal official said that
 investigations had revealed that "at least $100 billion has been 
misused through systematic corruption and embezzlement over several 
decades."
CNN
 could not reach Prince Miteb or his office for comment. The allegations
 against him and the others who were detained have not been 
independently verified.
 
 
But Prince Miteb has also been 
seen as a hurdle in the meteoric rise of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
 Salman, who led the arrest sweep. The National Guard was the last 
security branch that was not under the control of Prince bin Salman, who
 doubles as defense minister, furthering speculation that the wave of 
arrests served to consolidate the 32-year-old's grip on power.
The rich and powerful Miteb was once viewed as a contender to the throne when his father was in power.
Since
 King Abdulaziz Al Saud (also known as Ibn Saud) founded the kingdom in 
1932, the line of succession has run through Ibn Saud's sons. Prince bin
 Salman is set to be the first of Ibn Saud's grandsons to ascend the 
throne.  
In
 an interview with The New York Times last week, the Crown Prince was 
quoted as saying that "95 percent" of detainees in the anti-corruption 
sweep have agreed to a financial settlement.
The arrests came hours after King Salman decreed the creation of an anti-corruption committee led by the Crown Prince.
Around
 200 businessmen and officials were detained in the November 4 
operation, including at least 17 princes and top officials. Many of them
 are being held at Riyadh's lavish Ritz Carlton hotel, which normally 
plays host to visiting foreign dignitaries, such as US President Donald 
Trump.  
The list of 
detainees includes Prince Alwaleed bin Talal the billionaire businessman
 who owns 95% of Kingdom Holding, which holds stakes in global companies
 such as Citigroup, Twitter, Apple and News Corp. Former head of the 
royal court Khaled al-Tuwaijri and Saudi media mogul Waleed al-Ibrahim 
are also being held.

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