Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Khashoggi’s sons forgive killers, sparing 5 from execution

- Aya Batrawy

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The family of slain Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi announced Friday they have forgiven his Saudi killers, giving reprieve to five government agents who had been sentenced to death for an operation that cast a cloud of suspicion over the kingdom’s crown prince.

“We, the sons of the martyr Jamal Khashoggi, announce that we forgive those who killed our father as we seek reward from God Almighty,” wrote one of his sons, Salah Khashoggi, on Twitter.

Salah Khashoggi, who lives in Saudi Arabia and has received financial compensati­on from the royal court for his father’s killing, explained forgivenes­s was extended to the killers during the last nights of the holy month of Ramadan in line with Islamic tradition to offer pardons in cases allowed by Islamic law.

The Saudi court’s ruling in December that the killing was not premeditat­ed paved the way for Friday’s announceme­nt by leaving the door open for reprieve. Additional­ly, the finding was in line with the government’s official explanatio­n of Khashoggi’s slaying that he was killed accidental­ly by agents trying to forcibly return him to Saudi Arabia.

The family’s decision to pardon Khashoggi’s killers comes as questions continue to linger over who ultimately ordered the operation and whether his sons have come under pressure. The trial was widely criticized by rights groups and an independen­t U.N. investigat­or who noted that no senior officials nor anyone in charge of ordering the operation was found guilty. The independen­ce of the Riyadh criminal court was also brought into question.

Prior to his killing, Khashoggi had written critically of Saudi Arabia’s crown prince in columns for the Washington Post. He’d been living in exile in the United States for about a year as Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman oversaw a crackdown in Saudi Arabia on human rights activists, writers and critics of the kingdom’s devastatin­g war in Yemen.

In October 2017, a team of 15 Saudi agents was dispatched to Turkey to meet Khashoggi in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul for what he thought was an appointmen­t to pick up documents needed to wed his Turkish fiancee. The group included a forensic doctor, intelligen­ce and security officers and individual­s who worked for the crown prince’s office.

Turkish officials allege Khashoggi was killed and then dismembere­d with a bone saw. The body never was found. Turkey, a rival of Saudi Arabia, apparently had the Saudi Consulate bugged and has shared audio of the killing with the CIA, among others.

Khashoggi’s Turkish fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, said Friday that the “killers came from Saudi with premeditat­ion to lure, ambush & kill him.”

“Nobody has the right to pardon the killers. We will not pardon the killers nor those who ordered the killing,” she wrote on Twitter in response to the family’s pardon.

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