S. Arabia admits Khashoggi killed in consulate
DUBAI: Saudi Arabia said on Saturday that journalist Jamal Khashoggi had died in a fight inside its Istanbul consulate while King Salman dismissed five officials over the incident, which has sparked an international outcry and thrown Western relations with Riyadh into turmoil.
A US resident and a Washington Post columnist, Khashoggi was a prominent critic of King Salman’s son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
US President Donald Trump, who has made close ties with Saudi Arabia a centrepiece of his foreign policy, said in Arizona: “I think it’s a good first step, it’s a big step. Saudi Arabia has been a great ally. What happened is unacceptable.”
He said he would speak with the crown prince, but he also emphasised Riyadh’s importance in countering Iran and the importance for American jobs of massive US arms sales to Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter.
Some US lawmakers did not find the Saudi account convincing.
“To say that I am sceptical of the new Saudi narrative about Mr Khashoggi is an understatement,” said Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican.
Khashoggi went missing after entering the consulate on Oct 2 to obtain documents for his marriage to a Turkish national.
Days later, Turkish officials said they believed he was killed in the building and his body cut up, an allegation Saudi Arabia had, until now, strenuously denied.
The Saudi public prosecutor said on Saturday that a fight broke out between Khashoggi and people who met him in the consulate, leading to his death. Eighteen Saudi nationals had been arrested, the prosecutor said in a statement.
Another Saudi official said: “A group of Saudis had a physical altercation and Jamal died as a result of the chokehold. They were trying to keep him quiet.”
Saudi state media said King Salman had ordered the dismissal of five officials, including Saud al Qahtani, a royal court adviser seen as the right-hand man to Crown Prince Mohammed, and deputy intelligence chief Ahmed Asiri.
AUDIO RECORDING
Turkish sources say the authorities have an audio recording purportedly documenting Khashoggi’s murder inside the consulate.
Turkish pro-government newspaper Yeni Safak has published what it said were details from the audio. It said Khashoggi’s torturers cut off his fingers during an interrogation and later beheaded and dismembered him.
Before the announcement by Riyadh, President Trump said he might consider sanctions, although he has also appeared unwilling to distance himself too much from the Saudi leadership.
For other Western allies, a main question will be whether they believe Prince Mohammed, who has painted himself as a reformer, has no culpability. King Salman had handed the day-to-day running of Saudi Arabia to his son.
Britain said it was considering its “next steps”, while Australia said it had pulled out of a planned investment summit in Saudi Arabia in protest against the killing.
The crisis prompted the king to intervene, five sources with links to the Saudi royal family said.
King Salman also ordered the formation of a ministerial committee headed by Prince Mohammed to restructure the general intelligence agency, state media said, suggesting the prince still retained wide-ranging authority.
The White House said it would continue to press for “justice that is timely, transparent, and in accordance with all due process”.
Senator Jack Reed, a Democrat and member of the Senate’s armed services committee, said the Saudis were still not forthcoming with the truth.
“This appears to have been a deliberate, planned act followed by a cover-up,” he said in a statement
‘NO ORDERS TO KILL HIM’
Qahtani, 40, rose to prominence after latching onto Prince Mohammed, becoming a rare confidante in his inner circle.
Sources say Qahtani would regularly speak on behalf of the crown prince and has given direct orders to senior officials, including in the security apparatus.
People close to Jamal Khashoggi and the government said Qahtani had tried to lure the journalist back to Saudi Arabia after he moved to Washington a year ago fearing reprisals for his views.
In a Twitter thread from August last year, Qahtani wrote: “Do you think I make decisions without guidance? I am an employee and a faithful executor of the orders of my lord the king and my lord the faithful crown prince.”
In a tweet on Saturday, he thanked King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed for the “big confidence” they had in him.
Asiri joined the Saudi military in 2002, serving as spokesman for a coalition backing Yemen’s ousted president after Prince Mohammed led Saudi Arabia into that country’s civil war in 2015. He was named deputy chief of foreign intelligence last year.
The crown prince had no knowledge of the specific operation that resulted in Khashoggi’s death, a Saudi official familiar with the investigation said.
“There were no orders for them to kill him or even specifically kidnap him,” said the official. There was a standing order to bring critics of Saudi Arabia back to the country, he added.
“MbS (Prince Mohammed) had no knowledge of this specific operation and certainly did not order a kidnapping or murder of anybody. He will have been aware of the general instruction to tell people to come back,” the official said.
He added that the whereabouts of Khashoggi’s body were unclear after it was handed over to a “local cooperator”.
The public prosecutor’s statement did not specify where the operatives had put Khashoggi’s body or if they plan to inform the Turks. The Saudi official said: “We don’t know for certain what happened to the body.” In Saudi Arabia on Saturday, there was widespread support for the king and the crown prince on Twitter, with hashtags such as “#I am Saudi and I defend it” and “#Saudi kingdom of justice” trending.
Khashoggi’s Turkish fiance, Hatice Cengiz, tweeted in Arabic: “The heart grieves, the eye tears, and with your separation we are saddened, my dear Jamal,” she said, also asking “#where is martyr Khashoggi’s body?”
Published in Dawn, October 21st , 2018