Imperial Valley Press

Missing Saudi writer had big plans for his troubled region

- BY SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT — The Saudi contributo­r to the Washington Post who went missing more than a week ago and is feared dead had major plans, including a string of new projects to promote inclusiven­ess and accountabi­lity lacking around the Arab world, his friends say.

Jamal Khashoggi, a prolific writer and commentato­r, was working quietly with intellectu­als, reformists and Islamists to launch a group called Democracy for the Arab World Now. He wanted to set up a media watch organizati­on to keep track of press freedom.

He also planned to launch an economic-focused website to translate internatio­nal reports into Arabic to bring sobering realities to a population often hungry for real news, not propaganda.

Part of Khashoggi’s approach was to include political Islamists in what he saw as democracy building.

That — along with his sharp criticisms of the kingdom’s crackdowns on critics, its war in Yemen and its policy on Iran — put him at odds with the rulers of Saudi Arabia, which deeply opposes Islamists like the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, seeing them as a threat.

The Saudi journalist, whose 60th birthday is this weekend, had also personal plans. He bought an apartment in Istanbul and planned to marry the day after he disappeare­d. He planned to commute between Istanbul and his home in Virginia.

Khashoggi entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct.2 and has yet to emerge. Turkish officials believe he was killed in side the building by a death squad that flew in from Saudi Arabia.

A friend and neighbor in the United States, where Khashoggi had a condo since 2008, said the Saudi writer had the contacts and resources to make his plans work.

“He had the wisdom of a 60-year-old. He had the energy and a creativity of a 20-something,” he said, asking to remain anonymous out of respect for Khashoggi’s family.

Khashoggi had incorporat­ed his democracy advocacy group, DAWN, in January in Delaware, said Khaled Saffuri, another friend.

The group was still in the planning stages, and Khashoggi was working on it quietly, likely concerned it could cause trouble for associates, including activists in the Gulf, Saffuri said.

The project was expected to reach out to journalist­s and lobby for change, representi­ng both Islamists and liberals, said another friend, Azzam Tamimi, a prominent Palestinia­n-British activist and TV presenter.

Tamimi had planned to interview Khashoggi about the project on his show on Thursday, airing from Istanbul.

Instead, the show was held with an empty chair with Khashoggi’s picture on it as guests discussed the case.

“Democracy is currently being slaughtere­d everywhere. He wanted to alert Western public opinion to the dangers of remaining silent in the face of the assassinat­ion of democracy,” Tamimi told the AP.

“The Muslim Brothers and Islamists were the biggest victims of the foiled Arab spring.”

Tamimi said he and Khashoggi had set up a similar pro-democracy project together in 1992 when they first met.

It was called Friends of Democracy in Algeria, he said, and followed the botched elections in Algeria, which the government annulled to avert an imminent Islamist victory.

Khashoggi spoke out against powerful ultraconse­rvative clerics in Saudi Arabia. He was a voice of reform when Saudi Arabia came under intense criticism following the 9/11 attacks, in which a dozen Saudis were implicated.

When Sunni Islamists rose to power in other parts of the region, Khashoggi was pragmatic. He argued that the future of the region can’t be without Islamists and denounced government­s’ crackdowns on them.

He argued the most effective way to challenge Iran’s growing influence in the region is by allowing Sunni political Islam— a rival to Shiite Iran— to be represente­d in government­s.

Khashoggi was to marry his Turkish fiancée on Oct. 3.

He visited the Saudi consulate several days before he disappeare­d, and they asked him to return on Oct. 2 to pick up his divorce papers, necessary to legalize his new marriage in Turkey, Tamimi said.

Tamimi said Khashoggi told him at lunch that the consulate staff were friendly and cordial.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MUCAHID YAPICI ?? Yasin Aktay, an advisor to Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and a good friend sits next to an empty chair with a picture of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi placed on it, speaks during a live television program for London-based TV station al-Hewar, in Istanbul, late on Thursday.
AP PHOTO/MUCAHID YAPICI Yasin Aktay, an advisor to Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and a good friend sits next to an empty chair with a picture of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi placed on it, speaks during a live television program for London-based TV station al-Hewar, in Istanbul, late on Thursday.

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