July 30, 2015 | Quote

Saudi Royalty Flaunts Lavish French Holiday In Rare Photos

Swanky villas, fleets of gleaming new Mercedes and an entire beach annexed from the public are apparently not enough for some among of the 1,000-strong entourage accompanying Saudi King Salman during his three-week sojourn at the French Riviera. They’ve turned to Instagram to flaunt their wealth and privilege, too.

Images uploaded to the social media site capture Saudi Arabia’s elites basking in excessive splendor. Some have taken sunbathing selfies on the beach. Others have snapped still life photos of their fruit drinks aboard yachts on the Mediterranean. One member of the royal entourage posted a picture of the tony InterContinental Carlton Hotel in Cannes—from the inside of his Ferrari.

These virtual postcards offer a rare and new glimpse into a time-honored tradition among Saudi royalty. For decades, the kingdom’s elite have made vacationing during the European summer an extravagant enterprise. King Fahd, who ruled from 1982 to 2005, epitomized the art of the riotous Saudi holiday, constructing a mosque, sports center and marble and gold replica of the White House in Marbella, Spain. Up to 3,000 people traveled with him on visits to the 200-acre spread. During one seven week vacation before he died, Fahd and company reportedly blew through more than $100 million. The Saudi royal family also owns a sprawling palace in Switzerland.

… 

The behavior exhibited by Saudi royalty abroad could also be seen as a direct contradiction of the country’s practice of Wahhabism, an ultra-conservative strain of Islam. “It’s particularly outrageous for some Saudis to see their king partying in the supposedly hedonistic west,” said David Weinberg, a scholar with the Foundation For Defense of Democracies, a right-of-center think tank in Washington DC.

… 

Read the full article here