Bay of Plenty Times

Why the mystery of one missing journalist resonated around the world

- Analysis Washington Post Washington Post, Washington Post. Jamal Khashoggi

In the months before the disappeara­nce of columnist Jamal Khashoggi, Saudi Arabia's government racked up a startling record of human rights abuses.

It has led a coalition waging a brutal war in neighbouri­ng Yemen, which has killed thousands of civilians, including 40 children whose school bus was bombed in August. Saudi officials have jailed dissidents, businesspe­ople, clerics and journalist­s, as well as royal rivals to the country's de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

None of the Saudis’ atrocities and trespasses generated sustained outrage, at least not in the West. Thanks to crafty public relations management, Salman until recently enjoyed an image as a progressiv­e reformer and staunch American ally. On a recent goodwill tour of the United States, he was cordially received by the likes of Amazon founder and

owner Jeff Bezos, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Oprah Winfrey and Rupert Murdoch. The apparent murder of Khashoggi in Saudi Arabia's consulate in Istanbul appears to have changed all that.

Why the reaction to Khashoggi, a man few people had heard of until his disappeara­nce, when so many other acts of barbarity by the Saudis have been largely overlooked?

The answer may be a combinatio­n of the time and place of Khashoggi's disappeara­nce, and the gruesome circumstan­ces of his apparent death, which made his story more “relatable” to viewers and readers. The accumulati­on of details has created the kind of sustained news coverage the faceless victims of war and violence rarely receive, experts on internatio­nal affairs say.

Government­s around the world, including the United States, have called on Saudi Arabia to account

"What's been reported is so brazen and so gruesome that it seems like something out of a horror movie." Sarah Margon, Human Rights Watch

for what happened. In the days since, a Saudi investment conference involving American media companies and investors has all but collapsed in reaction. The constant news coverage has created perhaps the foremost foreign-policy crisis of US President Donald Trump's administra­tion.

Apart from the geopolitic­al implicatio­ns of Khashoggi's apparent killing, the volume of news coverage about him be a validation of a saying attributed to Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin: “A single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic.”

Though not widely known, Khashoggi was well connected in Washington. A former Saudi insider himself, he was a familiar figure among Washington's foreign-policy wonks, politician­s and media figures. He had also worked as a contributi­ng columnist for the an associatio­n that gave him an establishm­ent perch and internatio­nal cachet.

All that made him distinct and distinguis­hable from Saudi Arabia's many victims, said Stephen McInerney, executive director of the Project on Middle East Democracy.

“Jamal was not anonymous. He was a writer and journalist for the

It humanises him as a victim in a way [others] aren't humanised in their own country.”

It's also important that Khashoggi was apparently killed outside the kingdom, he said. The murder of a dissident inside Saudi Arabia would very likely have been covered up.

In this case, the events in question occurred in Turkey, a country with an adversaria­l relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia and thus an incentive to expose what happened, he said.

In fact, the Turkish government has been the leading source of leaks about the incident, providing such key bits of informatio­n as the identities of some men in the alleged Saudi “hit squad” and closed-circuit footage of Khashoggi entering the consulate. (The irony is that Turkey ranks as the world's foremost jailer of journalist­s, according to the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.)

What's more, Turkish officials have been the source of media reports about the way Khashoggi was said to have been tortured, beheaded and dismembere­d inside the building.

“What's been reported is so brazen and so gruesome that it seems like something out of a horror movie,” said Sarah Margon, the Washington director of Human Rights Watch.

The allegation­s have turned the Khashoggi case into “one of the most craven and depraved killings of a journalist that I can recall”, said Joel Simon, the executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalist­s. “The brutality inflicted is the kind of thing you see from a terrorist group, not a state actor.”

But even more mundane details have served to make his story memorable, said Margon of Human Rights Watch. She notes that he went to the Saudi consulate to get documents to marry his fiancee.

“There's so much conflict globally and so much brutality that it's easy to say, ‘war is war. Terrible things happen’,” said Margon. “When an individual is killed this way, it sticks with you. You can

understand it.”

 ?? PHOTO / AP ??
PHOTO / AP

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