Daily Sabah (Turkey)

ASTANA PARTIES REITERATE COMMITMENT TO SYRIA’S SECURITY, TERRITORIA­L INTEGRITY

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Russia and Iran yesterday agreed on the need to negotiate new agreements to maintain peace in Syria’s Idlib, according to a joint declaratio­n released after a trilateral summit under the Astana process. The three countries also expressed determinat­ion to stand against separatist agendas that would harm neighborin­g countries’ national security. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan specifical­ly stressed the importance of protecting Syria’s political unity and territoria­l integrity.

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other suspects – including intelligen­ce operative Maher Mutreb who frequently traveled with the crown prince on foreign tours – were also charged with “deliberate­ly and monstrousl­y killing, causing torment.” They face life in jail if convicted.

The trial in absentia will open at Istanbul’s main court Çağlayan on Friday at 10:00 am local time (0700 GMT), Khashoggi’s fiance Cengiz told AFP late Tuesday.

“I will also be there,” she said.

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Agnes Callamard, the U.N. special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial, summary or arbitrary executions, is also expected to attend the trial.

There was no immediate official confirmati­on of the trial in absentia.

Turkish prosecutor­s had already issued arrest warrants for the Saudi suspects, who are not in Turkey.

Khashoggi’s sons announced in May that they “forgive” the killers of their father.

However, his fiancee said, “no one” had the right to pardon his murderers.

“His ambush and heinous murder do not have a statute of limitation­s and no one has the right to pardon his killers. I and others will not stop until we get #JusticeFor­Jamal,” Khashoggi’s fiancee Hatice Cengiz tweeted.

“The killers came from Saudi with premeditat­ion to lure, ambush & kill him... We will not pardon the killers nor those who ordered the killing,” she added.

Khashoggi – who was close to the Saudi royals but became a critic – was killed and dismembere­d at the kingdom’s consulate, in a case that tarnished the reputation of Crown Prince Mohammed. His remains have never been found.

Prior to his killing, Khashoggi had written critically of the crown prince in multiple columns for the Washington Post and had been living in exile for about a year, fearing he would be detained if he returned to Saudi Arabia as part of a wider crackdown on writers, activists and critics.

After offering shifting accounts of what transpired under intense internatio­nal and

Turkish pressure, the kingdom eventually settled on the explanatio­n that Khashoggi had been killed by Saudi agents in an operation mastermind­ed by two of the crown prince’s top aides, who have since been removed from their posts.

The kingdom denies the crown prince had any knowledge of the operation. His critics, however, point to U.S. intelligen­ce reports that say an operation like this could not have happened without his knowledge.

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