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Thailand's 80-year-old monarch is king of the royal rich list

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Published Date: 23 August 2008
THAILAND'S King Bhumibol Adulyadej is the world's richest royal, according to a Forbes magazine list which is dominated by Middle Eastern monarchs riding high on surging oil prices.
The magazine said the 15 monarchs on its list had a combined wealth of $131 billion (£70 billion), up from $95 billion last year.

It added that they had managed to hold on to their riches "despite controversy ranging from tax evasion to the dissol
ution of parliaments in Swaziland and Kuwait".

It did, however, warn that its wealth estimates were "a blend or art and science", because the relationship between individual and state wealth was not always clear.

"While we have tracked the fortunes of a few high-profile royals, like the Queen of England and Sultan of Brunei, for years, this is only the second time we have published a definitive list of the richest royals," Forbes said. "Monarchs of such countries as Spain and Japan failed to make the cut."

King Bhumibol, who is 80 years old and the world's longest-reigning monarch after six decades on the throne, is regarded as semi-divine by many Thais.

Forbes said he was worth an estimated $35 billion.

He took the top spot from the only other Asian monarch on the list, Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah of oil-rich Brunei, who fell to the No4 slot this year after his fortunes shrank to $20 billion.

The richest Middle Eastern royal, and the second on the Forbes list, was Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan, the president of the oil-producing United Arab Emirates, whose fortune was estimated to be $23 billion.

Oil prices which have hit record highs have also helped King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter, who was at No3 on the list.

Among European monarchs, Prince Hans Adam II of Liechtenstein was the wealthiest, coming in at No6, followed by Prince Albert of Monaco, in ninth, and Queen Elizabeth, who was 12th.

Swaziland's King Mswati III was the only African ruler on the list.

Prince Karim al Husseini, or the Agha Khan, who is the spiritual leader of the Ismaili Muslim sect, is the only royal on the list without an actual country.





The full article contains 378 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 22 August 2008 10:05 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

2dogs in D.C.,

23/08/2008 00:13:33
Mind you all-I'm next in line for the throne.
2

Boy Wonder,

23/08/2008 07:27:25
#1. Aye ... there's a queue, pal. Bring your own toilet roll too!
3

Thomas Campbell,

New York 23/08/2008 15:52:24
Yes? Well, get going on it so the Queen and her family don't have to waste their time north of the border. Until then, she is the Head of State of the United Kingdom no matter what lazy, ill-informed journalists call her.
And the "Royal Rich List" itself riddled with errors; if you're too sensitive, I'd just ignore it.

 

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