Khashoggi murder: Turkey gives official details of Saudi writer's death
- Published
Turkey has given its first official statement on how it believes Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi was killed, saying he was immediately strangled.
The statement follows weeks of media reports about the murder at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on 2 October. Turkey has yet to provide evidence.
Chief prosecutor Irfan Fidan said meetings with his Saudi counterpart this week led to "no concrete results".
Saudi Arabia has not commented on the meetings.
The Turkish statement said: "In accordance with plans made in advance, the victim, Jamal Khashoggi, was choked to death immediately after entering the Consulate General of Saudi Arabia."
His body was then dismembered and destroyed "again, in line with advance plans", it added.
Khashoggi, a Saudi national working for the US press, was a well-known critic of his home country's rulers. His body has not been found, but Turkey, the US and Saudi Arabia have all agreed that he was killed at the consulate.
There is still no consensus on how he died.
What happened in the latest meetings?
Turkey said it had put three main questions to the Saudis during the prosecutor's visit:
Where is Khashoggi's body?
Do they have any new information about the planning of the killing?
Who was the "local co-operator "?
An unnamed Saudi official previously told Reuters news agency that Khashoggi's body had been rolled in a rug and given to a "local co-operator", who disposed of it.
On Wednesday, the delegation responded the questions in writing, according to Turkey.
Saudi Arabia said the answers could only come from a joint investigation. It also noted that it had never given an official statement on the existence of a "co-operator".
What has Turkey said?
Turkey has steered away from publicly blaming Saudi Arabia for the killing.
However, a senior spokesperson from the ruling AK Party said on Wednesday that it could not have been carried out without orders from someone in a senior position.
Saudi Arabia denies its royal family was involved.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke to Saudi King Salman last week, and the two agreed to continue co-operating in the investigation.
Unnamed Turkish officials have previously told media outlets that they had audio and visual evidence to prove their accounts of the writer's death, but nothing has been released.
Turkish media have published details on how sources say Khashoggi was killed, including allegations he was tortured.
His Turkish fiancée, Hatice Cengiz, gave a tearful interview to local television last week, saying she would never have let her partner enter the consulate if she had thought that the "Saudi Arabia authorities would hatch a plot" to kill him.
He had entered the consulate to sort out documents for their marriage.
What has Saudi Arabia said?
Attorney General Sheikh Saud al-Mojeb met Mr Fidan twice, visited the consulate and spoke with Turkey's intelligence agency during his visit to Istanbul this week. He flew back to Saudi Arabia on Wednesday without making an official statement.
Saudi Arabia has changed its account of what happened to Khashoggi.
When he first disappeared, it said Khashoggi had walked out of the building alive. It later admitted he had been murdered, saying the killing was premeditated and a result of a "rogue operation".
Saudi Arabia has subsequently said that Khashoggi was murdered, and that it is "determined to find out all the facts".
It has arrested 18 suspects, who, it says, will be prosecuted in Saudi Arabia. Turkey wants the suspects to be extradited.
What do other countries say?
Saudi Arabia has faced backlash over the death, including from its allies, who have called for answers.
President Donald Trump has said he is "not satisfied" with the Saudi account. However, he also said he was unwilling to sacrifice lucrative arms deals with the country.
Meanwhile, US activists have launched a petition, calling for a section of road near the Saudi embassy in Washington to be renamed Jamal Khashoggi Way.
On Wednesday, France's foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Khashoggi's death was a "crime" and "odious".
He said France was not "dependent on our economic relations with Saudi Arabia" and the country would impose sanctions, but no details were given.
UK Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt also said it was an appalling act, adding that it had "possibly" given the US and the UK a chance to put new pressure on Saudi Arabia over other issues.
Earlier in the day, the US called for a swift cessation of hostilities in Yemen, where a Saudi-led coalition has been fighting local Houthi rebels.
- Published29 October 2018
- Published22 October 2018
- Published22 October 2018