Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Newspaper: Turkey has audio of Saudi journalist’s slaying

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Mass protest in Germany:

ISTANBUL — Turkish officials have an audio recording of the alleged killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi from the Apple Watch he wore when he walked into the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul over a week ago, a pro-government Turkish newspaper reported Saturday.

The new claim published by the Sabah newspaper, through which Turkish security officials have leaked much informatio­n about the case, puts more pressure on Saudi Arabia to explain what happened to Khashoggi.

Also Saturday, Ankara’s top diplomat reiterated a call to Saudi Arabia to open up its consulate, from where Khashoggi disappeare­d, for Turkish authoritie­s to search.

The writer, who has written critically about Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, vanished after he walked into the consulate on Oct. 2. The kingdom has maintained the allegation­s against it are “baseless,” though an official early Saturday — on Khashoggi’s 60th birthday — acknowledg­ed for the first time that some believe the writer was killed by the kingdom.

Turkish authoritie­s recovered the audio from Khashoggi’s iPhone and his iCloud account, the newspaper said. The journalist had given his phones to his fiancee before entering the consulate.

The newspaper also alleged Saudi officials tried to delete the recordings first by incorrectl­y guessing Khashoggi’s PIN on the watch, then later using the journalist’s finger. However, Apple Watches do not have a fingerprin­t ID unlock function like iPhones. The newspaper did not address that inconsiste­ncy in its report. Storm in Europe: Hurricane Leslie weakened slightly into a post-tropical cyclone late Saturday as it closed in on Portugal and Spain. Forecaster­s said Saturday that sections of Portugal would see near hurricane-force winds, while parts of western Spain could be hit with tropical-force winds.

 ?? DAVID GANNON/GETTY-AFP ?? A woman holds a giant heart-shaped placard as tens of thousands of people protested racism and discrimina­tion Saturday in Berlin, a demonstrat­ion that came amid rising concerns about the increasing­ly confident far right.
DAVID GANNON/GETTY-AFP A woman holds a giant heart-shaped placard as tens of thousands of people protested racism and discrimina­tion Saturday in Berlin, a demonstrat­ion that came amid rising concerns about the increasing­ly confident far right.

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