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KHASHOGGI KILLING A ‘TREMENDOUS MISTAKE’, SAYS FOREIGN MINISTER

Adel Al Jubeir blames rogue operation for journalist’s death but says kingdom does not know location of body

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Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al Jubeir said that the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi was a “tremendous mistake” carried out by officers in a rogue operation that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was “not aware” of.

In the first interview by a Saudi official on record since Riyadh admitted on Saturday that the columnist was dead, Mr Al Jubeir told Fox News the kingdom did not have the full details about how the journalist was killed, nor where his body was.

“We don’t know, in terms of details, how. We don’t know where the body is,” he told the American news network.

A Saudi Foreign Ministry statement on Saturday said Khashoggi died after an altercatio­n at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul where he had entered to collect a divorce document but Riyadh was not yet fully aware of how the altercatio­n happened.

“The crown prince is not aware of this operation, even the senior leadership of our intelligen­ce service was not aware of this. This was ... a rogue operation,” said Mr Al Jubeir.

“This was an operation where individual­s ended up exceeding the responsibi­lities they had and they made the mistake when they killed Jamal Khashoggi in the consulate and they tried to cover up for it.”

He said such a cover-up was “unacceptab­le in any government” and the investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s death would be the start of a long process. He said Saudi King Salman was determined to hold those responsibl­e to account.

“These things unfortunat­ely happen. We want to make sure that those who are responsibl­e are punished and we want to make sure we have procedures in place to prevent it from happening again,” he said.

“We are determined to uncover every stone. We are determined to find out all the facts and we are determined to punish those who are responsibl­e for this murder.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced yesterday he would give a parliament­ary speech to address the death of the journalist. He promised to give the “naked truth” about the case.

Turkish media leaks have accused a team sent by Riyadh of dismemberi­ng Khashoggi’s body.

Addressing why a Saudi explanatio­n about Khashoggi’s death took two weeks to surface, the Saudi foreign minister said “you want the informatio­n you put out to be as accurate as you can – these things take time and you want to be careful”.

He also gave condolence­s to Kashoggi’s family, saying that officials in Riyadh “feel their pain”.

The journalist has relatives living in Saudi Arabia and three children who hold US citizenshi­p.

Despite internatio­nal criticism about the killing, including from US President Donald Trump, Mr Al Jubeir said US-Saudi ties would “weather this”. US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said yesterday it was too early to discuss sanctions against Saudi Arabia over the killing but said the explanatio­n given by Riyadh was “not enough”.

His comments were the latest from the US government that appear aimed at censuring a killing denied by Riyadh at the highest level, while protecting relations with the world’s top oil exporter.

“It would be premature to comment on sanctions and premature to comment on really any issues until we get further down the investigat­ion and get to the bottom of what occurred,” Mr Mnuchin said in Jerusalem.

On Saturday, Mr Trump said that he would speak to the crown prince “very soon”.

Mr Trump repeatedly said over the past week that he opposes any effort to impede more than $100 billion (Dh367.2bn) in US arms sales to Saudi Arabia but that he would consider sanctions against the kingdom.

On Friday, during a round table in Arizona, asked if he believed whether the Saudi explanatio­n that Khashoggi was killed during a “fist fight” with more than a dozen agents was credible, he said: “I do. I do.”

But later, in an interview with The Washington Post,

Mr Trump said: “Obviously there’s been deception and there’s been lies.”

Britain, Germany and France issued a joint statement condemning the killing, saying there is an “urgent need for clarificat­ion of exactly what happened”.

In a statement yesterday, the government­s said attacks on journalist­s were unacceptab­le and “of utmost concern to our three nations”.

They said the hypotheses proposed so far in the Saudi investigat­ion needed to be backed by facts to be considered credible.

They stressed that more efforts were needed to establish the truth, and that they would reserve judgment until they received further explanatio­n.

 ?? AP ?? The search for Jamal Khashoggi’s body led investigat­ors to the Belgrad Forest on the outskirts of Istanbul at the weekend
AP The search for Jamal Khashoggi’s body led investigat­ors to the Belgrad Forest on the outskirts of Istanbul at the weekend

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