Daily Trust Sunday

One year after Khashoggi murder: A global moral failure

Saudi Arabia has suffered few consequenc­es over murder and dismemberm­ent of critical journalist.

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It has been one year since Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered and dismembere­d inside the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul, Turkey. The 58-yearold journalist, who had become known for his criticism of the current Saudi regime, had gone to the consulate to obtain documents related to this upcoming marriage. Saudi agents dissolved his body in acid instead.

Seventy-nine journalist­s lost their lives in 2018 as a consequenc­e of their work. Yet Khashoggi’s murder stood out, not only due to the sheer savagery of the act but also to its brazen execution - Saudi Arabian officials clearly believed they could murder a journalist on foreign soil, under the eyes of the entire world, and get away with it.

The sad fact is: So far, they were right. Despite an initial surge of global outrage, we are not substantia­lly any closer to achieving justice for Khashoggi than we were one day after the news of his assassinat­ion made headlines around the globe. The Kingdom’s so-called “investigat­ion” and trial of 11 alleged accomplice­s are a farce, deliberate­ly hidden from internatio­nal view so as to offer a useful veneer of justice to those gullible or greedy enough to wish Saudi Arabia’s reputation­al rehabilita­tion.

In spite of the painstakin­g enquiry led by U.N. Special Rapporteur Agnes Callamard, who concluded that Khashoggi was the victim of “a deliberate, premeditat­ed execution, an extrajudic­ial killing for which the state of Saudi Arabia is responsibl­e under internatio­nal human rights law,” Saudi Arabia has suffered few real consequenc­es.

The U.S. Senate took the historic step last December of unanimousl­y passing a resolution blaming Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for Khashoggi’s killing, and more narrowly voted to end U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen. But President Donald Trump has blocked all attempts by the U.S. Congress to hold Saudi Arabia accountabl­e, unable to resist the Kingdom’s flattery. While Canada imposed sanctions on 17 individual­s allegedly linked to the murder, another leading Saudi ally, the UK, has declined to do so, a failure rebuked by the UK Parliament’s own foreign affairs committee last month.

This week, the Washington Post reported that top global financial executives plan to return to Saudi Arabia’s annual “Davos in the Desert” conference in October, after many had sat out last year’s edition. Obviously those executives feel enough time has passed that they can be publicly seen again wheeling and dealing with a regime that has few equals in its pernicious assault on basic rights and freedoms.

Saudi Arabia should be an internatio­nal pariah. And although there remains a strong current of voices fighting a return to business as usual, too many of its key allies are happy to remain wrapped in the kingdom’s embrace. For its part, instead of seeking justice, the country is busy shamelessl­y promoting itself as a tourist destinatio­n.

Every murder of a journalist is a tragedy and a crime. But the Khashoggi assassinat­ion is the most spectacula­r recent example we have of collective negligence to stand up for press freedom. It epitomizes the challenge we face in fighting impunity for the killings of journalist­s everywhere from Mexico to Pakistan.

One year later, there is no doubt about who killed Jamal Khashoggi. Unfortunat­ely, equally not in doubt is - so far - the internatio­nal community’s massive moral failure. Let’s hope that yet can be changed. (IPI)

 ??  ?? Khashoggi was a columnist for The Washington Post [Lefteris Pitarakis AP Photo]
Khashoggi was a columnist for The Washington Post [Lefteris Pitarakis AP Photo]

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