World leaders head to Saudi Arabia to meet new King Salman

A handout picture released by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) shows Saudi well-wishers kissing the hands of their new leader King Salman bin Abdul Aziz (C) in a symbolic pledge of allegiance during a ritual ceremony on January 23, 2015 at a royal palace in Riyadh's Al-Deera neighbourhood. AFP PHOTO / HO / SPA

Dignitaries and leaders from around the world were to arrive in Saudi Arabia Jan. 24 to offer their condolences to its new King Salman, a day after the death of his half-brother King Abdullah.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, Prince Charles and French President Francois Hollande were among the first leaders expected while US Vice-President Joe Biden was to arrive in the coming days.
  
Abdullah was a cautious reformer who led the Gulf state through a turbulent decade in a region shaken by the Arab Spring uprisings and Islamic extremism.
  
He died early Jan. 23 aged about 90 after being hospitalised with pneumonia.
  
Since he took the throne in 2005, Riyadh has been a key Arab ally of Washington, last year joining the coalition carrying out air strikes against the Islamic State jihadist group.
  
World leaders praised the king as a key mediator between Muslims and the West, but campaigners criticised his rights record and urged Salman to do more to protect freedom of speech and women's rights.
  
Gulf rulers, and leaders including Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an and Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, were among those who attended Abdullah's traditionally simple funeral at Riyadh's Imam Turki bin Abdullah mosque.
  
The late king's body, wrapped in a cream-coloured shroud, was borne on a litter by members of the royal family wearing red-and-white checked headgear.
  
The body was quickly moved to nearby Al-Od public cemetery and buried, in a grave marked only by a book-sized plain grey stone.
  
Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas and Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak arrived later to deliver condolences, as did Iraqi President Fuad Masum.
  
Masum had met...

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