The Observer, 22 January 1978, page 1
EXCLUSIVE
A Saudi Arabian Princess and her husband have been executed in public because she eloped with a commoner. A Special Correspondent reports
When Saudi Arabia issued a decree last summer banning travel by unaccompanied women, young Saudi Arabs bridled at what they believed was an excess of conservative Islamic zeal on the part of the ruling royal family.
Irritation over this measure has gradually changed to horrified disbelief and then indignation among many Saudis and other Arabs as word has gradually leaked out about the real reason for ban - a tragic romance last year in the desert kingdom involving the ultimately fatal bid of a Saudi princess to marry the man she loved.
The 23-year-old Princess Misha was one of the 2,000 princesses belonging to the house of Saud. Her grandfather was prince Muhammad Bin Adbul Aziz, the eldest surviving son of Ibn Saud and senior prince of the Saudi royal family.
The house of Saud increasingly intermarries as a means of protecting the family interest. It forbids its women to marry outside the family or a closely associated line, like that of the Sudeiris.
So when reports came back to Riyadh last summer of a romance in Beirut involving Princess Misha, the girl was swiftly summoned home and told that she must marry her family's choice - a man her father's age.
Her own suitor, whom she had met while studying in the Lebanon, was rejected by the family as a commoner, even though he was the cousin of Saudi Arabia's influential ambassador in Beirut, the former General Ali Shaar, who was Riyadh's proconsul in the Arab pact which ended the Lebanese civil war.
The princess, rather then submit to the family's choice, eloped with the young Shaar. They persuaded a sheikh to marry them and went to ground at the Hotel Al-Attras in a seaside resort called The Creek, north of Jedda.
There, last autumn, despite the travel ban imposed to prevent their escape, the young couple prepared to flee the country.
First, the princess staged a fake death by drowning, leaving her clothes on the shore. Then, disguised as a man in Saudi robes, her hair cut short under the head- cloth, the princess went to Jedda airport to board a plane with a group of friends. Her husband was to travel separately in the same plane.
But her identity was discovered when the passengers were searched by security guards before boarding the plane. They were both arrested on a royal warrant.
Dragged before her grand-father, the head of her branch of the royal family, the girl pleaded for mercy at least for her husband.