The Star Malaysia

‘Top officials ordered the hit’

Highest level of Saudi govt sought Khashoggi’s slaying, says Erdogan

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ANKARA: The order to kill Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi came from the highest level of the Saudi government, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, adding that the internatio­nal community had the responsibi­lity to “reveal the puppet masters” behind the slaying.

In an op-ed in The Washington Post on Friday, Erdogan said he did not believe that Saudi King Salman had ordered the killing of Khashoggi at the Saudi Consulate on Oct 2.

He said Turkey’s close ties to Saudi Arabia did not mean that Turkey could turn a blind eye to the killing of the journalist.

“We know that the order to kill Khashoggi came from the highest levels of the Saudi government,” Erdogan said.

Erdogan wrote: “As responsibl­e members of the internatio­nal community, we must reveal the identities of the puppet masters behind Khashoggi’s killing and discover those in whom Saudi officials – still trying to cover up the murder – have placed their trust.”

Istanbul’s chief prosecutor announced on Wednesday that Khashoggi, who lived in exile in the United States, was strangled immediatel­y after he entered the consulate as part of a premeditat­ed killing and that his body was dismembere­d before being removed.

Turkey is seeking the extraditio­n of 18 suspects who were detained in Saudi Arabia so they can be put on trial in Turkey.

The suspects include 15 members of an alleged Saudi “hit squad” that Turkey says was sent to Istanbul to kill the columnist who had written critically of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman also known as MBS.

Some of those implicated in the killing are members of the crown prince’s entourage.

In the opinion piece, Erdogan did not mention the prince.

But few in Turkey and elsewhere believe that the crime could have been carried out without the knowledge of the kingdom’s powerful heir apparent.

In Bulgaria on Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Khashoggi’s slaying a horrendous act that “should be duly dealt with” in a way that doesn’t undermine Saudi Arabia’s stability.

Netanyahu said at a news conference that Iran is a bigger threat than Saudi Arabia and those who want to punish the Middle East kingdom need to bear that in mind.

“A way must be found to achieve both goals, because I think that the larger problem is Iran,” said the Israeli leader, who attended a meeting of the prime ministers of Bulgaria, Greece and Romania and the president of Serbia at a Black Sea resort.

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