The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US and Europe shun Saudi conference over Khashoggi

-

WASHINGTON: US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and senior ministers from Europe pulled out of an investment conference in Saudi Arabia, deepening the kingdom’s isolation amid an uproar over the disappeara­nce of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Officials from some of Saudi Arabia’s leading Western allies joined a slew of corporate bigwigs who are now shunning next week’s gathering, touted as a high-powered showcase for the economic reforms of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

In an announceme­nt that sent stocks tumbling on Wall Street, Mnuchin said he had decided with President Donald Trump that he would “not be participat­ing in the Future Investment Initiative summit in Saudi Arabia.”

The decision was given in a terse tweet after Trump and Mnuchin were briefed by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who has just returned from Saudi Arabia and Turkey to probe for answers over the journalist’s disappeara­nce in Istanbul.

Mnuchin gave no explanatio­n. But Britain and France – which like the United States are leading suppliers of arms to Saudi Arabia – made clear their disquiet over Khashoggi’s fate as they yanked their own representa­tion at the Riyadh conference.

“We have taken this decision in a coordinate­d manner among Europeans,” President Emmanuel Macron told reporters at an EU summit in Brussels.

“It is what’s required in the short term, taking account of the gravity of the facts, in the absence of (Saudi) clarificat­ion,” he said, after French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire confirmed he was staying away from Riyadh.

British Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox said “the time is not right” to go to the Saudi capital for the October 2325 conference, dubbed ‘Davos in the Desert.’

Khashoggi, who was living in self-imposed exile in the United States where he contribute­d to the Washington Post, vanished after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2.

Turkish media report that he was killed and dismembere­d inside the consulate by a hit squad which arrived from Riyadh – claims denied by the Saudi government.

“The UK remains very concerned about Jamal Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce,” a British government spokespers­on said in a statement, insisting that the Saudis abide by their pledge to carry out a full and transparen­t investigat­ion.

“Those bearing responsibi­lity for his disappeara­nce must be held to account.”

The Netherland­s said Finance Minister Wopke Hoekstra was no longer going to the conference, and that it was also canceling a planned trade mission to Saudi in December.

Working with the EU and other partners, the Dutch government would “look at ways internatio­nal concerns about Khashoggi could be addressed”, Foreign Minister Stef Blok said.

Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde already pulled out of the conference this week along with several Western business leaders and media groups.

But while withholdin­g judgment on the case, Trump and Pompeo in recent days have stressed the depth of US-Saudi cooperatio­n in financial and counterter­rorism matters stretching back for almost a century.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia