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More than 200 members of Saudi Arabia's elite, including 11 princes, are now being detained at what is quite literally a gilded prison: the Ritz-Carlton hotel in the capital, Riyadh.
In a new report, the BBC reporter Lyse Doucet and camera operator Philip Goodwin described the atmosphere at the luxury hotel as "very serious."
Doucet and Goodwin, the first journalists allowed into the hotel since the purge, were under police escort and held to strict rules not to film anyone's face or quote anyone by name.
Here's a glimpse of what life in what Doucet called a "five-star prison" is like for its inhabitants.
Lyse Doucet and Philip Goodwin were the first journalists allowed into the Riyadh Ritz-Carlton since it the Saudi government started using it to detain officials and others detained in an anti-corruption purge earlier this month.
Among the "guests" now are more than 200 people accused of abuse of power, corruption, and money laundering. The Saudi government is also putting up hundreds of experts to process the cases 24/7.
bbc
Though the reporters were allowed in only during the dead of night, they saw small groups of men speaking in hushed voices. The mood was very serious and very somber, the reporters said.
There are reportedly 1,900 Saudi bank accounts totaling $800 billion frozen in the kingdom. "Even if we get 100 billion back, that would be good," an official told Doucet.
Officials said 4% of the accused say they will take their cases to court, but 95% are willing to make a deal, which would most likely result in large sums of money exchanged for freedom.
President Donald Trump stayed at the Ritz-Carlton during his trip to Saudi Arabia earlier this year — and the kingdom put his face on the side of the hotel.
Pictures of U.S. President Donald Trump and Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud are projected on the front of the Ritz-Carlton, where Trump is staying in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia May 20, 2017.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst