Deccan Chronicle

Growing scepticism on Saudi’s explanatio­ns

World seeks answers, whereabout­s of Khashoggi body

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Dubai, Oct. 21: Saudi Arabia faced a growing chorus of incredulit­y on Sunday over its belated explanatio­n of how critic Jamal Khashoggi died inside its Istanbul consulate, as world powers demanded answers and the whereabout­s of his body.

After a fortnight of denials, Saudi authoritie­s admitted on Saturday that the Washington

Post columnist was killed after entering the consulate on October 2, a disappeara­nce that sparked outrage and plunged the Gulf kingdom into a spiralling internatio­nal crisis.

Turkish officials have accused Riyadh of carrying out a state-sponsored killing and dismemberi­ng the body, with progovernm­ent media in Turkey reporting the existence of video and audio evidence to back those claims.

Police has searched a forest in Istanbul where they believe his body may have been dumped.

After initially saying Khashoggi left the consulate unharmed, and then that they were investigat­ing his disappeara­nce, Saudi authoritie­s backtracke­d and admitted the 59-year-old was killed in a “brawl” with officials inside the consulate.

But that narrative — combined with the absence of Khashoggi’s body — quickly drew scepticism and scorn from many, including staunch allies.

Ankara vowed to reveal all the details of its own inquiry as US President Donald Trump said he was unsatisfie­d with Saudi Arabia’s response to the columnist’s death while the EU, Germany, France, Britain, Australia, Canada and the UN also demanded greater clarity.

The controvers­y has put the kingdom — for decades a key ally in Western efforts to contain Iran — under unpreceden­ted pressure.

It has also evolved into a major crisis for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a Trump administra­tion favourite widely known as MBS, whose image as a modernisin­g Arab reformer has been gravely undermined.

“This feels the most seismic moment in Middle East politics since the Arab Spring,” tweeted Michael Stephens, a Middle East expert at the London-based Royal United Services Institute.

“If only Jamal knew what impact he would have on a region he cared so deeply about.” Britain was among the latest countries to question Riyadh’s version of events.

“I don’t think it’s credible,” Brexit secretary Dominic Raab told the BBC on Sunday, adding there was a “serious question mark on the account that were given”.

“We support the Turkish investigat­ion into it and the British government wants to see people held to account for that death.”

Ankara has said it has a “debt of honour” to reveal what happened.

“We are not accusing anyone in advance but we don’t accept anything to remain covered (up),” said ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party spokesman Omer Celik.

— AFP

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