The Guardian Australia

Jamal Khashoggi: details of alleged Saudi hit squad emerge

- Martin Chulov in Istanbul and Bethan McKernan

Saudi special forces officers, intelligen­ce officials, national guards and a forensics expert were allegedly among a 15-person team tied to the disappeara­nce in Istanbul of the high-profile dissident Jamal Khashoggi, it has been reported by Turkish pro-government newspapers.

The details of the alleged hit squad were listed on flight manifests leaked to Turkish media. Social media profiles of some of the alleged suspects link them to elite sections of the Saudi security apparatus.

Meanwhile, investigat­ors are turning their focus towards the undergroun­d garage of the Saudi consul general’s home, where the cars thought to have carried Khashoggi are believed to have to have been driven immediatel­y after they left the nearby consulate.

Investigat­ors also disclosed on Wednesday that they were focusing on an Apple watch that Khashoggi was wearing that was connected to an iPhone he had left with his fiancee outside the consulate. “We have determined that it was on him when he walked into the consulate,” a security official told Reuters. Investigat­ors are seeking to determine what informatio­n the watch had transmitte­d.

Donald Trump said that the US was “demanding” answers from the Saudi government and working closely with Turkey to find out what happened to the missing dissident.

“It’s a very serious situation for us and for this White House,” he told reporters on Wednesday. “I want to see what happens and we’re working very closely with Turkey and I think we’ll get to the bottom of it.”

The US president also said that he had invited Khashoggi’s fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, to the White House.

Mike Pompeo, the US secretary of state, John Bolton, the national security adviser, and Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, all spoke to the Saudi Arabian crown prince, Mohammed Bin Salman, to request further informatio­n about the missing journalist, according to the White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders.

Twenty-two US senators signed a letter to Trump on Wednesday triggering an investigat­ion and determinat­ion of whether human rights sanctions should be imposed over Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce.

In the letter, the senators said they had triggered a provision of the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountabi­lity Act requiring the president to determine whether a foreign person is responsibl­e for a gross human rights violation.

Turkish officials remain convinced that Khashoggi was killed by the alleged hit squad inside the consulate building – a view partly formed by security footage, much of which has not been released. But, unlike the roads outside the diplomatic mission, they have no camera coverage of the consul general’s residence or the garage beneath it, and say the cars and their occupants remained out of sight for several hours before continuing to Atatürk airport.

Details of the Saudi citizens who travelled to Istanbul were released amid a claim that they had brought with them a bone saw to dismember Khashoggi. “It was like Pulp Fiction,” a Turkish official told the New York Times. Suggestion­s that Khashoggi was killed and his body then mutilated have gained wide circulatio­n in the week since he vanished, and Turkish officials continue to insist he met a brutal fate when he stepped through the doors of the diplomatic mission.

The alleged involvemen­t of a forensics expert adds weight to the suspicions. The passenger manifest, obtained by the pro-government Daily Sabah newspaper, also lists a senior intelligen­ce officer and two Saudi air force officers.

The Saudi team is said to have arrived at Atatürk airport on Tuesday last week on two planes, one of which

landed in the pre-dawn hours and the second in the early afternoon. Airport security officials now say they checked all bags that the Saudi teams took with them to the airport and say there were nothing suspicious in any of the items loaded on to the jets for their return journeys to Riyadh.

Officials also said they had become aware that Khashoggi may have been kidnapped before the second plane had departed, and monitored seven Saudis in a waiting room as they checked their luggage for a second time. When nothing unusual was discovered, the plane was allowed to leave.

Turkish media have broadcast CCTV footage that shows the alleged Saudi team arriving and leaving Istanbul airport, as well as vehicles approachin­g and leaving the consulate.

On Wednesday evening, the Washington Post cited US intelligen­ce intercepts to report that Saudi Arabia’s crown prince had ordered an operation targeting Khashoggi. The paper reported unnamed US officials saying Saudis had been heard discussing a plan to lure the journalist from Virginia and detain him.

A state department spokesman earlier insisted the US had no forewarnin­g on any threat.

The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has promised a transparen­t investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s fate. However, many officials who provided informatio­n earlier in the inquiry are now refusing to speak, citing political sensitivit­ies.

Turkey had in recent days attempted to offer Riyadh a way to de-escalate a crisis that continues to gather momentum outside the region by suggesting that a “deep state” and not senior Saudi officials were responsibl­e for Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce. However, there has been little interest from the kingdom, leading some senior Turkish officials to conclude that Riyadh does not fear the consequenc­es.

“If it’s confirmed Riyadh is responsibl­e for Khashoggi’s death, this could be their Crimea moment,” said HA Hellyer, senior nonresiden­t fellow at the Atlantic Council and the Royal United Services Institute in London. “Russia annexing Crimea caused justifiabl­e huge uproar internatio­nally, but in the end not very much happened to Putin or Russia.”

Khashoggi was last seen a week ago entering the consulate in Istanbul to get documents related to his forthcomin­g marriage.

The disappeara­nce of the acclaimed columnist and senior adviser to previous Saudi regimes has rocked Washington, where he had been based for the past year as a columnist for the Washington Post, and struck fear through establishm­ent circles in Riyadh, where the 59-year-old had been a popular figure.

He was one of the few public intellectu­als to openly critique the new administra­tion of Prince Mohammed. The Saudi government has denied any involvemen­t in Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce and said he left the consulate via a back entrance. Last week Prince Mohammed told Bloomberg that his government was “very keen to know what happened to him”.

On Tuesday Cengiz used an opinion piece for the Washington Post to appeal to Trump for help to “shed light” on the disappeara­nce. “I also urge Saudi Arabia, especially King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, to show the same level of sensitivit­y and release CCTV footage from the consulate,” she wrote.

 ?? Photograph: Ozan Köse/AFP/Getty Images ?? Protesters in Istanbul hold pictures of missing journalist Jamal Khashoggi on Monday.
Photograph: Ozan Köse/AFP/Getty Images Protesters in Istanbul hold pictures of missing journalist Jamal Khashoggi on Monday.

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