Khashoggi murder: UN investigator tries but fails to access Saudi consulate where the journalist was killed -The Independent
30.01.2019, 13:18
A UN official investigating the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi was unable to examine the Saudi consulate where he was killed despite requesting access to the crime scene, prompting Turkish officials to add pressure on Riyadh, as The Independent reported.
The UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, Agnes Callamard, arrived in Turkey on Monday for a week-long visit to kick off her investigation of the murder. She told journalists she sought to enter the consulate in Istanbul where Khashoggi was murdered but has not been given permission to do so.
“We are respectfully calling on the authorities to give us access at some stage,” she said, according to news agencies, conceding that she had submitted her request “quite late” and was willing to allow Saudi authorities time to respond.
But Turkish officials demanded she be allowed in.
“The fact that this rapporteur has not been accepted in is scandalous,” Omer Celik, spokesperson for Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development party, said in a television interview. “It is an approach that shows there is no cooperation and something is being concealed.”
Ms Callamard, heading a team that includes a UK barrister and a Portuguese forensic pathologist, may not find any new evidence in the building, which has already been examined by Saudi and Turkish investigators.
But a visit to the consulate may give her a sharper picture of what unfolded inside the facility on 2 October, when members of a kill squad dispatched from Riyadh brutally murdered and dismembered the journalist after he was lured inside.
Saudi Arabia insists that rogue senior intelligence and security officials close to the country’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, concocted the scheme to kill Khashoggi, a Washington Post contributor, on their own, handing his corpse off to a “local collaborator” who disposed of it.
Riyadh claims it is prosecuting or investigating nearly two dozen men allegedly connected to the killing, but has presented to evidence of a court proceedings or named any suspects. It has rejected Turkey’s demand to extradite the suspects to be tried under Turkish law.
Many international human rights and press freedom groups suspect Riyadh is attempting to sweep the Khashoggi matter under the rug in order to continue pursuing big business deals with western partners spooked by the widespread outcry over the killing, which became a global symbol of declining civil liberties and increasing impunity by autocrats.
Ms Callamard has until June to investigate the case and present her findings to the UN Human Rights Council.
Turkey has embraced Ms Callamard’s probe. On Monday she met with Turkey’s foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and justice minister Abdulhamit Gul in Ankara, and an on Tuesday with Istanbul chief prosecutor Irfan Fidan who is heading the investigation.
Fahrettin Altun, director of communications for Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said on Twitter that Ankara welcomed any attempt to answer lingering questions. “We still do not know where Khashoggi’s body is, who ordered the hit and who the ‘local collaborator’ was,” he wrote. “Justice must be served.”
The Independent
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