The New Zealand Herald

Saudi royal is a protected pariah at the G20 summit

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rights complaints against him.

But Mohammed was also secure in the knowledge that US President Donald Trump had said that the Crown Prince’s culpabilit­y, if any, would not rupture the US relationsh­ip with Riyadh. That guarantee helped convince Mohammed that he could make the trip.

And Mohammed has found comfort in some quarters here — a high five from a grinning Russian President Vladimir Putin, and a brief televised exchange with Trump. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was also photograph­ed smiling next to Mohammed.

But the man who once sought to fashion himself as the younger, fresher face of Saudi leadership has also found himself transforme­d into a global symbol of brutal tyranny. He has also been taken to task. In a conversati­on with the Prince, France’s President Emmanuel Macron called for internatio­nal investigat­ors to join the probe into Khashoggi’s killing, and stressed “the necessity of a political solution” to the Saudi-backed war in Yemen. “The Khashoggi case is serious and I think the truth needs to be sought,” he said. A heated conversati­on between the two was captured on mic. “I do worry. I am worried. I told you,” Macron says. “Yes, you told me, thank you very much,” the Prince says. “You never listen to me,” Macron responds.

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan slammed the Saudis for their contradict­ory statements and lack of cooperatio­n with Turkish investigat­ors probing the assassinat­ion. During her one-on-one with Mohammed, Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May refused to discuss key economic issues. Instead, May, a government spokesman said, raised the Khashoggi assassinat­ion, saying Saudi Arabia needed to “take action to build confidence that such a deplorable incident could not happen again,” according to the

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