Malta Independent

Missing journalist may have been killed in a consulate in Turkey

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Turkish prosecutor­s have opened an investigat­ion into the disappeara­nce of a missing Saudi journalist.

Jamal Khashoggi, a critic of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has not been seen since Tuesday, when he entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

Turkish sources quoted by Reuters and the Washington Post say they believe he has been killed inside the consulate.

They did not give any evidence for the claim, nor suggest how he was killed.

Saudi officials have not yet commented, however a source at the consulate - also quoted by Reuters - described the accusation­s as baseless.

The source added that a security team had arrived in Istanbul to investigat­e Mr Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce.

Earlier, Prince bin Salman told Bloomberg News that Turkish authoritie­s were welcome to search the building.

Turkish media said prosecutor­s were now looking closely at the case, although this may be a widening of an inquiry begun on Tuesday.

The two unnamed sources said on Saturday that the initial assessment of police was that Mr Khashoggi had been killed at the consulate.

“We believe that the murder was premeditat­ed and the body was subsequent­ly moved out of the consulate,” one of the sources told Reuters.

A source quoted by The Washington Post said the journalist was killed by a 15-member Saudi team sent “specifical­ly for the murder”.

If confirmed, the state-sponsored murder on Turkish soil of a highprofil­e Saudi dissident would worsen already strained relations between Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

Turkey has taken the side of Qatar over its blockade by Saudi Arabia and other neighbours, and Turkey’s rapprochem­ent with Iran has riled the government in Riyadh.

Reuters earlier quoted the Turkish ruling party as saying the investigat­ion would be comprehens­ive and that the government’s sensitivit­y about the case was at the “highest level”. The AK Party said Mr Khashoggi’s whereabout­s would be uncovered.

The head of the Turkish-Arab Media Associatio­n told the New York Times that Turkish police officers providing security for the consulate had checked their security cameras and did not see the journalist leave on foot. But Turan Kislakci added that diplomatic cars had been seen moving in and out.

On Wednesday, the Turkish foreign ministry summoned Saudi Arabia’s ambassador and asked for an explanatio­n about the disappeara­nce.

Prince bin Salman told

Bloomberg: “He’s a Saudi citizen and we are very keen to know what happened to him. And we will continue our dialogue with the Turkish government to see what happened to Jamal there.

“My understand­ing is he entered and he got out after a few minutes or one hour. I’m not sure. We are investigat­ing this through the foreign ministry to see exactly what happened at that time.

“The premises are sovereign territory, but we will allow them to enter and search and do whatever they want to do. If they ask for that, of course, we will allow them. We have nothing to hide,” Mr bin Salman said.

When asked if Mr Khashoggi faced charges in Saudi Arabia, the crown prince said his country would need to know where he was first.

Mr Khashoggi went to the consulate to obtain a document certifying he had divorced his ex-wife, so that he could marry his Turkish fiancée, Hatice, who went with him to the building and waited outside, but did not see him leave.on Wednesday

She said that he was “stressed and sad” that he was forced to go to the building.

He was required to surrender his mobile phone, which is standard practice in some diplomatic missions.

Hatice said he left the phone with her and told her to call an adviser to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan if he did not return.

She said she waited for him outside the consulate from about 1pm until after midnight and did not see him leave. She returned when the consulate reopened on Wednesday morning.

The 59-year-old journalist is one of the most prominent critics of the crown prince, who has unveiled reforms praised by the West while carrying out an apparent crackdown on dissent, which has seen human and women’s rights activists, intellectu­als and clerics arrested, and waging a war in Yemen that has triggered a humanitari­an crisis.

A former editor of the al-Watan newspaper and a short-lived Saudi TV news channel, Mr Khashoggi was for years seen as close to the Saudi royal family. He served as an adviser to senior Saudi officials.

After several of his friends were arrested, his column was cancelled by the al-Hayat newspaper and he was allegedly warned to stop tweeting, Mr Khashoggi left Saudi Arabia for the US, from where he wrote opinion pieces for the Washington Post and continued to appear on Arab and Western TV channels.

“I have left my home, my family and my job, and I am raising my voice,” he wrote in September 2017. “To do otherwise would betray those who languish in prison. I can speak when so many cannot.”

 ??  ?? Fog sits on the fields of a village near Kassel, central Germany, just before sunrise on Saturday Photograph: AP
Fog sits on the fields of a village near Kassel, central Germany, just before sunrise on Saturday Photograph: AP
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