State media reported that Turkey is pursuing the trial to reveal the full truth behind the killing. A Turkish court on Tuesday added new defendants to the murder charge against Saudi officials over the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Khashoggi, a
critic of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was last seen entering the
Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018.
Turkish
officials believe his body was dismembered and removed, while his remains have
not been found.
In September
a Saudi court jailed eight people for between seven and 20 years over the
killing, in a trial that critics said lacked transparency. None of the
defendants was named.
At Tuesday’s
hearing in Istanbul, only the second session of a trial which opened four
months ago, the court accepted a second indictment adding six defendants to the
list of 20 Saudi officials already being tried in absentia.
The latest
indictment accuses a vice consul and an attache of “premeditated murder with
monstrous intent”.
The four
others, also Saudi nationals, were charged with destroying, concealing or
tampering with evidence.
A Turkish
court on Tuesday added new defendants to the murder charge against Saudi
officials over the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
State media
reported that Turkey is pursuing the trial to reveal the full truth behind the
killing.
Khashoggi, a
critic of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was last seen entering the
Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018.
Turkish
officials believe his body was dismembered and removed, while his remains have
not been found.
In September
a Saudi court jailed eight people for between seven and 20 years over the
killing, in a trial that critics said lacked transparency. None of the
defendants was named.
At Tuesday’s
hearing in Istanbul, only the second session of a trial which opened four
months ago, the court accepted a second indictment adding six defendants to the
list of 20 Saudi officials already being tried in absentia.
The latest
indictment accuses a vice consul and an attache of “premeditated murder with
monstrous intent”.
The four
others, also Saudi nationals, were charged with destroying, concealing or
tampering with evidence.
The court
heard testimony from Egyptian opposition activist Ayman Noor, a friend of
Khashoggi’s, before adjourning the case till March 4 and extending a process
which has kept Khashoggi’s killing in the public eye and further strained
relations between Turkey and Saudi Arabia.
Yasin Aktay,
a member of President Tayyip Erdogan’s AK Party and an acquaintance of
Khashoggi, said a just verdict could not have been expected from a Saudi court
that was ruling on senior Saudi officials.
“The events
actually transpired in Turkey. If we have a concern about justice, there is no
other way than to have confidence in Turkish courts,” he said after Tuesday’s
hearing.
The first
indictment accused two top Saudi officials, former deputy head of Saudi
Arabia’s general intelligence Ahmed al-Asiri and former royal court adviser
Saud al-Qahtani, of instigating murder.
It said 18
other defendants were flown to Turkey to kill Khashoggi, a prominent and
well-connected journalist who had grown increasingly critical of the crown
prince.
Noor said in
court that Khashoggi called him about 10 days before he came to Turkey, and
broke down in tears as he asked Noor to delete an interview Khashoggi had recorded
with him.
“Qahtani had
called him from Saudi Arabia. He threatened him with very strong language,
saying he knew his children and was close to them,” Noor said, according to
Turkey’s state-owned Anadolu news agency.
Qahtani, a
top aide to Prince Mohammed who was sacked and was later sanctioned by the U.S.
Treasury over his suspected role, has not faced trial in Saudi Arabia.
He did not
respond to requests for comment at the time of the Saudi trial.
The CIA and
some Western countries believe Prince Mohammed ordered the killing, which Saudi
officials deny.
Reporters
Without Borders said it was disappointed by the court’s rejection of its
request to join the case as a civil party, and would continue to closely
monitor the case and call for adherence to international standards.
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