Saudi royal gets life in jail for London murder

LONDON, (Reuters) – A Saudi prince was jailed for  life in Britain yesterday for beating and strangling his servant in the room they shared at a luxury London hotel after what prosecutors called a campaign of sadistic abuse.

Saud Abdulaziz bin Nasser al Saud, 34, was told he must  serve a minimum term of 20 years in jail for murdering Bandar  Abdulaziz, 32, also a Saudi, at the Landmark Hotel in February.

The prince, who told detectives he was a grandson of the  Saudi king, had admitted manslaughter — unintentional killing  — but denied murder. Standing in the dock with arms crossed,  Saud showed no emotion as the sentence was handed down in  London’s historic Old Bailey court.

Prosecutors described how the servant was bitten on both  cheeks during a final assault by Saud. In previous attacks, the  servant suffered “a series of heavy punches or blows to his head  and face”, leaving his left eye closed and swollen, lips split  and teeth chipped and broken, the Press Association reported.

There were horrific injuries to one of his ears and internal  bruising and bleeding to the brain as well as severe injuries to  the neck consistent with manual compression, prosecutors said.

They told the court that Saud tried to cover up the true  nature of his relationship with his servant, saying they were  friends and equals, but that a porter at the hotel said  Abdulaziz was treated “like a slave”.

Prosecutors further said the two men were believed to have  had some form of sexual relationship and that the physical abuse  had a “sexual element”.

The prince testified he was heterosexual and had a  girlfriend back home. Prosecutors said they found he had booked  appointments with at least two male escorts and one gay masseur,  and looked at hundreds of images of men on gay websites.

Photographs of Mr Abdulaziz in “compromising” positions were  on Saud’s phone, prosecutors told the court.

When arrested, Saud at first believed he was protected by  diplomatic immunity but his status as a Saudi royal was not  sufficient, according to prosecutors.