Gulf News

Outcry over Khashoggi ‘hysterical’

SUSPECTS WILL FACE TRIAL IN SAUDI ARABIA, AL JUBEIR SAYS, CAUTIONING THAT ‘INVESTIGAT­IONS TAKE TIME’

- MANAMA

Saudi Arabia’s top diplomat said yesterday that the global outcry and media focus on the killing of a Saudi journalist earlier this month has become “hysterical” as he urged the public to wait for the results of an investigat­ion before ascribing blame.

Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist, was killed during a fist fight in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2. Saudi Arabia has arrested 18 persons in connection with the killing.

“This issue has become fairly hysterical,” Foreign Minister Adel Al Jubeir said. “I think people have assigned blame on Saudi Arabia with such certainty before the investigat­ion is complete.”

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman has condemned the killing as “heinous” and “painful”, avowing that justice will prevail.

‘Probe will be transparen­t’

Al Jubeir was speaking in response to questions from Western journalist­s at an annual conference of internatio­nal officials, including US Defence Secretary James Mattis, in Bahrain. “We have made clear that we are going to have a full and transparen­t investigat­ion, the ■ results of which will be released. We have made it very clear that those responsibl­e will be held responsibl­e,” he said.

“We’re trying to uncover what happened. We know that a mistake was committed. We know that people exceeded their authority and ... we’re investigat­ing them,” he said. But he cautioned that “investigat­ions take time.”

“Unfortunat­ely, there has been this hysteria in the media about Saudi Arabia’s guilt before the investigat­ion is completed,” he said.

The suspects will not be extradited to Turkey, the Saudi foreign minister said. “The individual­s are Saudi nationals, they are detained in Saudi Arabia, the investigat­ion is in Saudi Arabia,” Al Jubeir said at the conference. “They will be prosecuted in Saudi Arabia.”

He was not privy to the details of the investigat­ion.

The foreign minister said six Saudi officials in total were dismissed over the killing. King Salman Bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud has assigned his son, the crown prince, to oversee the restructur­ing of the kingdom’s intelligen­ce bodies in the aftermath of the killing.

Saudi Arabia had said that the killing was “premeditat­ed,” citing evidence from Turkish officials investigat­ing what happened. The kingdom’s chief prosecutor will arrive in Turkey today as part of the investigat­ion and will meet with Turkish counterpar­ts, according to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

 ?? AP ?? Adel Al Jubeir
AP Adel Al Jubeir

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