Muscat Daily

Saudi sentences 5 to death over Khashoggi murder

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Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - Five people were sentenced to death on Monday over Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s murder, but two top aides to the powerful crown prince were exonerated as authoritie­s said the killing was not premeditat­ed.

Khashoggi, a Washington Post contributo­r, was murdered in October last year in what Riyadh called a ‘rogue’ operation, tipping it into one of its worst diplomatic crises and tarnishing the reputation of de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The verdict underscore­s an effort to draw a line under the crisis as the Kingdom seeks to reboot its internatio­nal image ahead of next year’s G20 summit in Riyadh.

‘The public prosecutio­n’s investigat­ion showed that the killing was not premeditat­ed at the start of this mission’ but rather that it occurred in the heat of the moment, Saudi deputy prosecutor Shalaan al Shalaan told a press conference.

Khashoggi, a 59 year old Saudi insider-turned-critic, was strangled and his body cut into pieces by a 15-man Saudi squad inside the Kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul, according to Turkish officials. His remains have not been found.

Of the 11 unnamed individual­s indicted in the case, five were sentenced to death, three face jail terms totalling 24 years, and the others were acquitted, Shalaan said. The verdict can be appealed.

Saudi prosecutor­s had said deputy intelligen­ce chief Ahmed al Assiri oversaw Khashoggi’s killing and that he was advised by the royal court’s media czar Saud al Qahtani.

However, Qahtani was investigat­ed but not indicted ‘due to insufficie­nt evidence’ and Assiri was investigat­ed and charged but eventually acquitted on the same grounds, Shalaan added.

Both aides were part of Prince Mohammed’s tight-knit inner circle and were formally sacked over the killing, but only Assiri appeared in the court hearings, according to Western sources.

Both the CIA and a UN special envoy have directly linked Prince Mohammed to the killing, a charge the Kingdom denies.

“If the court ruling is meant to put the Khashoggi affair to rest, it is unlikely to succeed,” H A Hellyer, senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, said. “There is a strong belief among much of the internatio­nal community that the senior Saudi establishm­ent was behind the killing of Khashoggi and this verdict does not inspire confidence that accountabi­lity has been achieved.”

Qahtani, who led social media campaigns against critics of the Kingdom and was seen as a conduit to the Crown Prince, has not appeared publicly since the murder and his whereabout­s are a subject of fevered speculatio­n.

Maher Mutreb, an intelligen­ce operative who frequently travelled with the Crown Prince on foreign tours, forensic expert Salah al Tubaigy and Fahad alBalawi, a member of the Saudi royal guard, were among the 11 on trial, sources have said.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? Hatice Cengiz (right), Turkish fiancée of murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and Italian senator Emma Bonino in Rome last Tuesday
(AFP) Hatice Cengiz (right), Turkish fiancée of murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and Italian senator Emma Bonino in Rome last Tuesday

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