Arab Times

Mnuchin to skip investment conference

PUTIN SAYS CAN’T JUSTIFY SPOILING SAUDI TIES OVER KHASHOGGI UK, French, Dutch ministers pass on Future Investment Initiative

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WASHINGTON, Oct 18, (Agencies): US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Thursday he will skip next week’s Saudi investment summit, dealing another blow to Riyadh following the suspected murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

“I will not be participat­ing in the Future Investment Initiative summit in Saudi Arabia,” Mnuchin announced on Twitter after meeting with US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Pompeo had just returned from Saudi Arabia and briefed Trump on the status of the investigat­ion into the journalist’s disappeara­nce in Turkey.

With Wall Street already teetering on Thursday, Mnuchin’s announceme­nt sent US stocks tumbling, adding to losses from a recent sell-off.

Prominent business partners of Saudi Arabia and investors, including companies with significan­t investment from Riyadh, have fled the conference since Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce on Oct 2 during a visit to the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

Khashoggi was a prominent political and human rights critic of the Saudi government who had been living in the United States.

While withholdin­g judgment on the case, Trump and Pompeo in recent days have stressed the depth of US-Saudi cooperatio­n in financial and counterter­rorism matters stretching back for almost a century.

Pompeo says he told Saudi Arabia’s rulers that the US takes “very seriously” the disappeara­nce of Khashoggi and will await the outcome of investigat­ions by the Kingdom and Turkey before deciding how the US will respond. Pompeo addressed reporters Thursday after briefing Trump at the White House on his talks with leaders in Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

Pompeo says the Saudis assured him they will conduct a “complete, thorough” investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce.

Enough informatio­n

President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that Russia did not have enough informatio­n about the unexplaine­d disappeara­nce of the Saudi journalist to justify spoiling ties with Riyadh.

Putin told a discussion forum in the Black Sea resort of Sochi that Moscow did not really know what had happened in the case, that it was a pity that the journalist had gone missing, and that Russia would wait for details.

Meanwhile, senior ministers from Britain, France and The Netherland­s on Thursday pulled out of a major investment conference in Saudi Arabia, expressing deep concern over the disappeara­nce of Khashoggi.

The ministers joined a slew of corporate bigwigs who are now shunning next week’s Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh, touted as a showcase for the economic reforms of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Like the United States, Britain and France are leading suppliers of arms to the Kingdom, but yanked top-level representa­tion at the Oct 23-25 conference, dubbed “Davos in the Desert”.

British Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox said “the time is not right” to go to Riyadh.

Khashoggi, who was living in self-imposed exile in the United States where he contribute­d to the Washington Post, vanished after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct 2.

Concerned

“The UK remains very concerned about Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce,” a British government spokespers­on said in a statement, insisting that the Saudis abide by their pledge to carry out a full and transparen­t investigat­ion.

“Those bearing responsibi­lity for his disappeara­nce must be held to account.”

French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire also said he would not be attending the Saudi conference, saying: “The current circumstan­ces do not allow me to go to Riyadh” and describing Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce as a “very serious” matter.

And President Emmanuel Macron’s office concurred, saying “pending the outcome of the investigat­ion, it was not appropriat­e for France to be represente­d at this level”.

The Netherland­s also said Finance Minister Wopke Hoekstra was no longer going to the conference, and that it was also cancelling a planned trade mission to Saudi in December.

Working with the EU and other partners, the Dutch government would “look at ways internatio­nal concerns about Khashoggi could be addressed”, Foreign Minister Stef Blok said.

Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde already pulled out of the conference this week along with several Western business leaders and media groups.

Patrice Caine, the chairman and chief executive of French defence electronic­s group Thales, has decided not to attend a Saudi investment conference next week, amid global concerns over the fate of a missing Saudi journalist.

A spokesman for Thales added that the French company would neverthele­ss be represente­d at the event, by JeanLoic Galle, who is an executive at Thales’ space division.

SAP, Europe’s most valuable tech company, will continue to do busi- ness in Saudi Arabia, a top executive told Reuters, saying he hoped the circumstan­ces of the disappeara­nce Khashoggi are clarified.

“We can’t put a long-term commitment to a market into question in response to an isolated incident,” Chief Financial Officer Luka Mucic told Reuters. “Having said that, I would hope that this case can be cleared up as soon as possible.”

Mucic had not been planning to attend a conference in Saudi Arabia next week that has been hit by highprofil­e cancellati­ons amid concerns that Khashoggi, a columnist for the Washington Post, was murdered inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

He did attend the event last year but, this year, SAP will send a regional executive to attend.

“I visit the country regularly and see high growth potential — and high actual growth in the private sector,” Mucic said in an interview.

“We can’t abandon these customers — we have to deliver on our promise to be a long-term partner.”

The $140 billion German business software firm says it is growing strongly in Saudi Arabia and opened its first data centre in the desert Kingdom this year.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A portrait of Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz is seen on Oct 18, in Riyadh.
(AFP) A portrait of Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz is seen on Oct 18, in Riyadh.

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