Jamal Khashoggi: UN pins
murder on Saudi Arabia, its Crown Prince and state agents
The United Nations has now
indicted Saudi Arabia for the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was
killed by Saudi agents inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2.
In the report released on
19 June, UN extrajudicial executions investigator Agnes Callamard said
Khashoggi’s death “constituted an extrajudicial killing for which the State of
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is responsible”.
Here’s the executive
summary for the records:
State Responsibilities
1. Mr. Khashoggi’s killing
constituted an extrajudicial killing for which the State of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia is responsible. His attempted kidnapping would also constitute a
violation under international human rights law. From the perspective of
international human rights law, State responsibility is not a question of, for
example, which of the State officials ordered Mr. Khashoggi’s death; whether
one or more ordered a kidnapping that was botched and then became an accidental
killing; or whether the officers acted on their own initiative or ultra vires.
2. The killing of Mr. Khashoggi
further constituted a violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
(thereafter VCCR) and of the prohibition against the extra-territorial use of
force in time of peace (customary law and UN Charter). In killing a journalist,
the State of Saudi Arabia also committed an act inconsistent with a core tenet
of the United Nations, the protection of freedom of expression. As such, it can
be credibly argued that it used force extra-territorially in a manner
“inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations.”
3. Further, the
circumstances of the killing of Mr. Khashoggi may constitute an act of torture
under the terms of the Convention Against Torture, ratified by Saudi Arabia.
Finally, the killing of Mr. Khashoggi may also constitute to this date an
enforced disappearance since the location of his remains has not been
established.
Saudi Crown Prince Salman:
UN report indicts the country
Individual liability
4. The Special Rapporteur
has determined that there is credible evidence, warranting further
investigation of high-level Saudi Officials’ individual liability, including
the Crown Prince’s. She warns against a disproportionate emphasis on
identifying who ordered the crime, pointing out that the search for justice and
accountability is not singularly dependent on finding a smoking gun and the
person holding it. The search is also, if not primarily, about identifying
those who, in the context of the commission of a violation, have abused, or
failed to fulfill, the responsibilities of their positions of authority.
Duty to investigate and
consular immunity
5. The Special Rapporteur
has found that both the investigations conducted by Saudi Arabia and Turkey failed
to meet international standards regarding the investigation into unlawful
deaths.
6. Saudi officials were
present in the Saudi consulate and residence in Istanbul from 6 to 15 October
during which time they presumably investigated the killing. However, the
Special Rapporteur was not provided with any information regarding the evidence
they may have collected during this period. The Saudi Public Prosecution made
public a few of their findings on 15 November but the statement was light on
details, limiting itself to a few general allegations. Other statements
regarding the actions and responsibilities of specific individuals were a
welcomed step. However, the Special Rapporteur notes that some of the
individuals allegedly referenced in these statements and the identity of 11
perpetrators currently on trial do not match. Further, the Saudi authorities
have yet to disclose the whereabouts of the remains of Mr. Khashoggi.
7. The Special Rapporteur
found that under the terms of the VCCR, Saudi authorities were under no legal
obligation to grant access to the Consular premises to the Turkish
investigators. However, Saudi Arabia was under an international obligation to
cooperate with the Turkish authorities in the investigation of the killing of
Mr. Khashoggi. Such cooperation necessarily demanded that they gave access to
the consulate to the Turkish authorities in a prompt and effective fashion and
in good faith. Consular immunity was never intended to enable impunity.
8. The Special Rapporteur
found credible evidence pointing to the crime scenes having been thoroughly,
even forensically, cleaned. These indicate that the Saudi investigation was not
conducted in good faith, and that it may amount to obstructing justice.
9. Turkish investigators,
accompanied by Saudi investigators, only had access to the Consulate on the
15th October for 6 hours and to the Consul’ residence on 17th October for
around thirteen hours, where they also had to search the whole consular vehicle
fleet. Their scientific and forensic inquiries were limited to “swabbing” and
they were not allowed to drain a well located in the residence. The limitations
imposed by Saudi Arabia on the Turkish investigation cannot be justified by the
need to protect Consular operations.
10. Turkish investigators
decided not to search the Saudi Consulate without proper authorization from the
Saudi authorities. The Special Rapporteur found that this was the appropriate
way to proceed: creating an exception to the VCCR grounded inviolability of the
Saudi Consular premises for the purpose of an investigation would have been
unnecessary and disproportionate.
11. She also found that
Turkey’s fear over an escalation of the situation and retribution meant that
the consular residences or consular cars were also not searched without
permission even though they are not protected by the VCCR.
12. The Special Rapporteur
regrets that it appears no international body or other State came forward with
an offer to “mediate” between the two parties to negotiate prompt and effective
access to the crime scene. This could have been done to also help de-escalate
the crisis, protect equally the VCCR and human rights, and address as well the
fear of retaliation. Instead, it appears that other Member States pondered
rather only their own national and strategic interests. The United Nations
either considered it had no evident means of intervention or elected not to
intervene. In retrospect, it is evident that the ultimate casualty of these
considerations was justice and accountability for Jamal Khashoggi.
Duty to protect and to warn
13. On the basis of
credible information at her disposal, the Special Rapporteur has concluded that
there is insufficient evidence to suggest that either Turkey or the United
States knew, or ought to have known, of a real and imminent or foreseeable
threat to Mr. Khashoggi’s life. There was credible evidence to suggest that,
had Mr. Khashoggi returned to Saudi Arabia, or been lured there, he would have
been detained, possibly disappeared, and harmed. These risks were not linked to
his life or presence in his countries of residence, namely the US or Turkey.
She did not secure credible evidence that US authorities had intercepted the
Saudi Crown Prince’s communications or that such intercepts had been assessed before
the time of the killing of Mr. Khashoggi.
14. The killing of Mr.
Khashoggi has highlighted the vulnerabilities of dissidents living abroad, and
the risks they are facing of covert actions by the authorities of their
countries of origin or non-State actors associated to them. The States of the
countries where they have found residence or exile are under an obligation to
respect their human rights, and protect them against violence by the States of
the countries they have escaped from. This obligation should entail, namely:
(a) The duty to protect is
triggered whenever Governments know or ought to know of a real and immediate
threat or risk to someone’s life;
(b) Such an obligation to
protect includes, but is not limited to, a duty to warn the individual of an
imminent threat to their life
(c) The obligation to
protect, including the duty to warn, is imposed on all Governments agencies and
institutions, and thus includes Intelligence Agencies
(d) The obligation to
protect applies regardless of the status of citizen or alien on the territories
of the State.
(e) The obligation to
protect, including the duty to warn, demands that risks assessment take into
account whether some individuals may be particularly at risk because of their
identity or activities, such as journalists or human rights defenders.
(f) The obligation to
protect, including the duty to warn, may be triggered extra-territorially,
whenever States exercise power or effective control over individual’s enjoyment
of the right to life.
Duty to prosecute and
reparations
15. The Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia has taken timid steps towards addressing its State responsibilities in
terms of prosecution and reparation. But these stop short of what is required
under international law. The accountability gap is all the more worrying given
that it concerns a crime that has received an unprecedented level of attention
and outcry internationally, including official public condemnation the world
over.
16. The on-going trial in
Saudi Arabia of 11 suspects in the killing of Mr. Khashoggi, while an important
step towards accountability, fails to meet procedural and substantive
standards. The trial is held behind closed doors; the identity of those charged
has not been released nor is the identity of those facing the death penalty. At
the time of writing, at least one of those identified as responsible for the
planning and organizing of the execution of Mr. Khashoggi has not been charged.
17. The Government of Saudi
Arabia has invited representatives of Turkey and of the permanent members of
the Security Council to attend at least some of the hearings. However, the
Special Rapporteur has been told that this trial observation was conditional
upon agreement to not disclose its details. Trial observation under those
conditions cannot provide credible validation of the proceedings or of the
investigation itself. It is particularly concerning that, given the identity of
the observers, the institution of the UN Security Council itself has been made
complicit in what may well amount to a miscarriage of justice.
18. In view of her concerns
regarding the trial of the 11 suspects in Saudi Arabia, the Special Rapporteur
calls for the suspension of the trial.
19. To date the Saudi State
has failed to offer public recognition of its responsibility for the killing of
Mr. Khashoggi and it has failed to offer an apology to Mr. Khashoggi’s family,
friends and colleagues for his death and for the manner in which he was killed.
The Special Rapporteur obtained information regarding a financial package
offered to the children of Mr. Jamal Khashoggi but it is questionable whether
such package amounts to compensation under international human rights law.
20. The restructuring of
the Intelligence Services announced by King Salman is insufficient. There has
been no subsequent information elaborating on the impact of the restructuring
(or any other measures) on the decision-making, training, and codes of ethics
of the Security Agencies, to name a few issues of concern. Instead, one would
expect the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to demonstrate non-repetition including by
releasing all individuals imprisoned for the peaceful expression of their
opinion and belief; investigating all allegations of torture and lethal use of
force in formal and informal places of detention; investigating all allegations
of enforced disappearances and making public the whereabouts of individuals
disappeared. It should also undertake an in-depth assessment of the actors,
institutions and circumstances that made it possible for the execution of Mr.
Khashoggi to be carried forward and identify the reforms required to ensure
non-repetition.
Universal jurisdiction
21. The Special Rapporteur
believes that the killing of Mr Kashoggi constitutes an international crime
over which States should claim universal jurisdiction. The killing of Mr.
Khashoggi is a violation of a jus cogen norm. It violates the VCCR and the prohibition
against the extraterritorial use of force in times of peace. The circumstances
of the execution may amount to an act of torture under the Convention Against
Torture. It is a continuing case of enforced disappearance since the remains of
Mr. Khashoggi have not been located. It concerns a journalist in self-imposed
exile. His execution has an enduring international impact.
Accountability
22. The Special Rapporteur
is concerned that legal accountability for the execution of Mr. Khashoggi is
being made difficult to obtain. The trial underway in Saudi Arabia will not
deliver credible accountability. Turkey has not initiated proceedings yet and
hopes for credible accountability are weak in a country with such a track
record of imprisonment of journalists. Jurisdictional challenges and the
impossibility of conducting a trial in absentia mean that a trial in the US
will face many challenges. The Special Rapporteur makes a number of proposals
for how some of these issues may be addressed while warning that no one
proposal on its own will deliver credible accountability.
23. The Special Rapporteur
emphasizes that the search for accountability and justice should include other
means, including political, diplomatic, financial, symbolic. Actions to
celebrate and recall the life of Jamal Khashoggi have an important part to play
in ensuring public accountability for his execution.

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