Houston Chronicle

Turkey: Saudis sent team to erase evidence

Official says men tried to cover up Khashoggi killing

- By Carlotta Gall

ISTANBUL — More than a week after Saudi agents killed journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul, Saudi Arabia sent an expert team to clean up evidence of the crime, under the guise of helping with the investigat­ion, a senior Turkish official said Monday — the latest twist in a case that has caused an internatio­nal uproar.

A pro-government newspaper, Sabah, published news of the Saudi cleanup team and photograph­s of two of its members, whom it identified as a chemist

and a toxicologi­st, who visited the Saudi Consulate where Khashoggi was killed.

The senior Turkish official confirmed the main details of the report and said the Saudi team was sent with the knowledge of top Saudi officials. The two men traveled to Turkey for the sole purpose of covering up evidence of the killing before Turkish police were allowed to search the premises, the official said in comments relayed by electronic message.

The two men were identified as Ahmad Abdulaziz al-Jonabi, a chemist, and Khaled Yahya al-Zahrani, a toxicologi­st, part of a team of Saudi investigat­ors who spent several days in Turkey visiting the consulate and the consul’s residence,

ostensibly to help with the investigat­ion into Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce, the newspaper reported.

The Turkish official confirmed the names of the two individual­s and said that they were part of a cleanup team. The official spoke on condition of anonymity, according to the rules of his office.

Saudi Arabia has detained 18 people implicated in the killing of Khashoggi, 59, but has not said who ordered what Turkish officials have characteri­zed as the political assassinat­ion of a prominent critic of the Saudi government. Turkish

and Western officials have said it is unlikely that such a plan would have been carried out without the blessing of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is seen as the country’s de facto ruler and has been consolidat­ing his grip on power since last year.

Speaking on Monday in Geneva, the president of Saudi Arabia’s human rights commission, Bandar al-Aiban, vowed a full investigat­ion and punishment of those responsibl­e but shed no new light on the case. His remarks, before the United Nations Human Rights Council, came in a review of the kingdom’s human rights record.

Turkey has demanded, to no avail, that Saudi Arabia disclose what became

of Khashoggi’s body, that it name the “local collaborat­or” who a Saudi official has said helped dispose of the remains and that it turn over the 18 suspects to face the Turkish justice system.

In the wake of the killing, internatio­nal companies have come under pressure to cut ties to Saudi Arabia, but on Monday, the chief executive of SoftBank of Japan said it would continue to do business with the kingdom.

The Saudi cleanup team arrived in Istanbul on Oct. 11, nine days after Khashoggi’s death, and visited the consulate every day from Oct. 12 to Oct. 17, according to Sabah. Turkish investigat­ors were not allowed into the consulate, which is considered Saudi sovereign territory, until Oct. 15.

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