Yorkshire Post

Journalist’s killers sentenced to death

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

WORLD: Saudi Arabia has sentenced five people to death for the killing of Washington Post columnist and Saudi royal family critic Jamal Khashoggi.

The writer was murdered in the Saudi consulate, in Istanbul last year.

The Riyadh criminal court found another three people guilty of covering up the crime.

SAUDI ARABIA has sentenced five people to death for the killing of Washington Post columnist and Saudi royal family critic Jamal Khashoggi.

The writer was murdered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last year.

The Riyadh criminal court found another three people guilty of covering up the crime.

They were sentenced for a combined 24 years in prison, according to a statement read by the Saudi attorney general’s office on state TV.

In total, 11 people had been on trial in Saudi Arabia for the killing, but the government has not made their names public.

All can appeal against the preliminar­y verdicts.

A handful of diplomats, including from Turkey, as well as members of Mr Khashoggi’s family were allowed to attend the nine court sessions, although independen­t media were barred.

Mr Khashoggi, who was a resident of the US, had walked into his country’s consulate on October 2, 2018 for a scheduled appointmen­t to pick up documents that would allow him to marry his Turkish fiancée, Hatice Cengiz.

He never walked out and his body has not been found.

A team of 15 Saudi agents was flown specifical­ly to Turkey to meet Mr Khashoggi that day inside the consulate.

They included a forensic doctor, intelligen­ce and security officers and individual­s who worked for the office of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, according to an independen­t UN probe.

His death stunned Saudi Arabia’s Western allies and immediatel­y raised questions about how the high-level operation could have been carried out without the knowledge of Prince Mohammed.

The kingdom insists the crown prince had nothing to do with the killing.

In an interview in September with CBS’s 60 Minutes, Prince Mohammed said: “I take full responsibi­lity as a leader in Saudi Arabia.”

But he reiterated that he had no knowledge of the operation because he could not keep such

I take full responsibi­lity as a leader in Saudi Arabia.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman,, speaking on US TV earlier this year.

close track of the country’s millions of employees.

Meanwhile, Turkey, a rival of Saudi Arabia, has used the killing on its soil to pressure the kingdom.

Turkey, which had demanded the suspects be tried there, apparently had the Saudi Consulate bugged and has shared audio of the killing with the CIA, among a handful of others.

Saudi Arabia initially offered multiple shifting accounts about Mr Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce.

As internatio­nal pressure mounted due to Turkish leaks, the kingdom eventually settled on the explanatio­n that he was killed by rogue officials in a brawl.

The trial concluded the killing was not premeditat­ed, according to Shaalan al-Shaalan, a spokespers­on from the Saudi attorney general’s office.

A 101-page report released this year by Agnes Callamard, the UN special rapporteur for extrajudic­ial, summary and arbitrary executions, included details from the audio Turkish authoritie­s shared with her. She reported hearing Saudi agents waiting for Mr Khashoggi to arrive and one of them asking how they would carry out the body. “Joints will be separated. It is not a problem,” the doctor says in the audio. “If we take plastic bags and cut it into pieces, it will be finished.”

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