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Jamal Khashoggi 'strangled as soon as he entered consulate then dismembered', Turkish prosecutor says

Tensions between Turkish and Saudi investigators probing the Khashoggi murder spill out into the open as prosecutor accuses Riyadh of again changing its story

Tom Embury-Dennis,Borzou Daragahi
Wednesday 31 October 2018 11:06 EDT
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CCTV footage shows Jamal Khashoggi entering Saudi embassy in Istanbul

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Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi was strangled as soon as he entered the country’s Turkish consulate before his body was dismembered, Istanbul’s chief prosecutor has said in what was seen as an attempt by Turkey to pressure Riyadh over the investigation.

Irfan Fidan said the killing of the dissident writer was planned and that he had asked Saudi prosecutor Saud al-Mojeb to reveal the location of the body.

The statement came after Mr Fidan and Mr Mojeb carried out inspections at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where Mr Khashoggi was killed earlier this month, and held meetings with Turkey’s public prosecutor and Turkish intelligence officials.

“Despite our well-intentioned efforts to reveal the truth, no concrete results have come out of those meetings,” said Mr Fidan in the statement.

Mr Fidan’s statement did not confirm rumours that Ankara possesses audio or visual recordings capturing the Washington Post columnist’s final moments. Unnamed Turkish officials had previously told media that Mr Khashoggi had been killed and dismembered, but Mr Fidan’s statement marked the first official confirmation.

Turks have grown quickly frustrated with their Saudi counterparts, whom they accuse of attempting to derail and obfuscate the murder. Turks keep asking who ordered the 18-man operation to murder Mr Khashoggi and what happened to the victim’s body. They have received no satisfactory answers.

“They were more interested in finding out what we had on the killers than share information with us,” said a source close to the Turkish government. “Instead of answering very simple questions, they invited the Turkish investigators to Saudi Arabia. It looks like an attempt to run down the clock until nobody cares any more.”

Saudi Arabia has continually changed its story regarding the affair. Days after Mr Khashoggi walked into the consulate and was murdered, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, believed by many world leaders to have ordered the hit, told Bloomberg to ask the Turks what happened to Mr Khashoggi.

After insisting for weeks that Mr Khashoggi had walked out of the consulate, the Saudis claimed he died in a scuffle with their own agents seeking to entice him to return home, with the panicked operatives disposing of his body hastily disposed of by “a local collaborator.” As more evidence was leaked, Saudi Arabia admitted the killing was a “premeditated” plot but refused to say who ordered it.

In his statement the Turkish prosecutor accused his Saudi counterpart of again revising Riyadh’s account by falsely claiming that “no statement had been made by the authorities of the kingdom of Saudi Arabia regarding the existence of a ‘local collaborator’”.

Riyadh and Ankara have clashed even over basic jurisdictional matters. Turkey is seeking the extradition of 18 Saudi suspects detained in Saudi Arabia over Mr Khashoggi’s killing, insisting that as the crime was committed on Turkish soil they have a duty to prosecute it. Saudi officials have said the kingdom will try the 18 suspects and bring them to justice because they are their own citizens who allegedly killed another citizen in a Saudi diplomatic facility.

The public airing of differences between Saudi Arabia and Turkey came as a group of Republican senators asked Donald Trump to suspend civilian nuclear talks with Saudi Arabia over the murder and its actions in Yemen and Lebanon.

Justice for Jamal Khashoggi protest outside the Embassy of Saudi Arabia

The five US lawmakers, led by senator Marco Rubio, said they would use the Atomic Energy Act to block any US-Saudi nuclear agreements if Mr Trump did not cut off talks.

“The ongoing revelations about the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, as well as certain Saudi actions related to Yemen and Lebanon, have raised further serious concerns about the transparency, accountability, and judgment of current decision makers in Saudi Arabia,” the senators wrote.

“We therefore request that you suspend any related negotiations for a US-Saudi civil nuclear agreement for the foreseeable future,” said the lawmakers, who included senators Cory Gardner, Rand Paul, Dean Heller and Todd Young.

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