The Hamilton Spectator

Turkish media say video shows Saudi assassins

- AYSE WIETING, SUZAN FRASER AND JON GAMBRELL

ISTANBUL — Two Gulfstream jets carrying 15 Saudis landed at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport before dawn on the day last week that journalist Jamal Khashoggi entered the Saudi Consulate and vanished.

The men checked into hotels and left Turkey later that night.

Turkish media, which released surveillan­ce camera video of the men on Wednesday, said they were members of an elite Saudi “assassinat­ion squad,” sent to kill Khashoggi, a Saudi critic.

Saudi Arabia remained silent at the accusation as the images were seen around the world, raising pressure on the kingdom to explain what happened to the writer, a critic of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Adding to the macabre mystery, a Turkish official said one member of the team was an “autopsy expert.”

Saudi Arabia has dismissed allegation­s it played a role in Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce as “baseless.”

But it has offered no evidence to support its contention he left the consulate unharmed last week and vanished into Istanbul while his fiancée waited outside.

The video, shown on the staterun broadcaste­r TRT and others, did not offer definitive proof about Khashoggi’s fate.

Turkish officials have said they fear the team killed Khashoggi.

President Donald Trump said the U.S. is “demanding” answers from Saudi Arabia about Khashoggi and wants to bring his fiancée, Hatice Cengiz, to the White House.

He added he spoke with the Saudis about what he called a “bad situation,” but he did not disclose details.

Earlier, U.S. officials warned that any harm done to the 59year-old Washington Post contributo­r will jeopardize its relations with the kingdom, its close ally and the world’s largest oil exporter.

The Turkish security camera video was reminiscen­t of the surveillan­ce video sleuthing done by officials investigat­ing the assassinat­ion of a Hamas operative in Dubai in 2010 or the slaying of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s half brother in Malaysia in 2017.

The silent video showed one of two private Gulfstream jets that Turkish media said carried the Saudi group, who flew in and out of Istanbul on Oct. 2.

The Sabah newspaper, which is close to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, published images of what it referred to as the “assassinat­ion squad,” apparently taken at passport control at the airport.

The state-run Anadola news agency published the names and birth dates of all 15 Saudis.

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