Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Saudi Crown Prince Calls Khashoggi Killing a ‘Heinous’ Crime
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
October 24, 2018

Share

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — In a fiery and unwavering appearance Wednesday at an investment forum, Saudi Arabia’s crown prince called the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi “heinous” and “painful to all Saudis,” before warning anyone against trying to “manipulate” the crisis and drive a wedge between the kingdom and Turkey.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was joined onstage by two Arab allies as he made his first extensive public remarks about the killing that has sparked widespread condemnation and marred his international standing after Turkish reports said a member of his entourage was involved in the crime.
Many international business leaders pulled out of the Future Investment Initiative, the kingdom’s main economic forum, after the Oct. 2 killing of The Washington Post columnist inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul.
But in the forum’s vast and ornate auditorium, thousands of people who did attend rose to their feet to applaud the 33-year-old heir whose strong showing underscored his reputation for being bold and assertive.

Saudis Cooperating With Turkey on Investigation

Prince Mohammed, who spoke with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan by phone before the forum, addressed the case immediately after taking the stage for a panel discussion, saying the Saudis were cooperating with Turkey on the Khashoggi investigation.

“The situation that took place is very painful to all Saudis, especially because it was a Saudi citizen. And I suspect it is painful to anyone in the whole world.”Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
“The situation that took place is very painful to all Saudis, especially because it was a Saudi citizen. And I suspect it is painful to anyone in the whole world,” Prince Mohammed said.
“It is a heinous act that is unjustifiable,” he added, before cautioning anyone who might try “to manipulate the situation” and sow division between Riyadh and Ankara.
“I have a message for them: They will not be able to do that as long as there is a king called Salman bin Abdul-Aziz and a crown prince called Mohammed bin Salman in Saudi, and a president in Turkey called Erdogan,” he said to applause.
Erdogan on Tuesday delivered a sharp rebuttal of Saudi Arabia’s widely criticized account that the dissident writer died accidentally in a brawl, saying Saudi officials had planned the killing for days.
He kept up the pressure Wednesday, saying in Ankara: “We are determined not to allow the murder to be covered up and for those responsible — from the person who gave the order to those who executed it — not to escape justice.”

A Man Acted as a Possible Decoy

Erdogan has said that 15 Saudi officials arrived in Istanbul shortly before Khashoggi’s death and that a man, apparently dressed in the writer’s clothes, acted as a possible decoy by walking out of the consulate on the day of the disappearance.

“Well, the prince is running things over there more so at this stage. He’s running things and so if anybody were going to be, it would be him.” President Donald Trump
Turkish officials say the 15 men comprised a Saudi hit squad that included a member of Prince Mohammed’s entourage on overseas trips. Saudi Arabia has suggested, without offering evidence, that the team went rogue. It has arrested 18 Saudis and fired five top officials, some of whom worked directly under the crown prince.
Turkish media have published a security camera image showing a vehicle belonging to the Saudi Consulate purportedly scouting a forest in the outskirts of Istanbul before the killing.
The killing of the 59-year-old Khashoggi has created an international firestorm as suspicion mounts that the crown prince had a hand in the killing.
“Well, the prince is running things over there more so at this stage. He’s running things and so if anybody were going to be, it would be him,” President Donald Trump was quoted telling the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday.
Khashoggi, who lived in self-imposed exile in the U.S. for nearly a year before his death, had written critically of the young prince’s crackdown on dissent. Dozens of Saudi activists, writers, clerics and even women who were behind calls for the right to drive have been detained.
Photo of Saudi participant in front of a banner for the Future Investment Initiative conference
A Saudi participant walks in front of a banner for the Future Investment Initiative conference, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Wednesday will address an international investment summit in Riyadh, his first such comments since the killing earlier this month of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

The Royals Expressed Their Condolences

King Salman and Prince Mohammed met Tuesday with Khashoggi’s son, Salah, and his brother, Sahel, at the Yamama Palace, where the royals expressed their condolences, according to state-run Saudi news, which distributed photos of the event. A friend of the Khashoggi family told The Associated Press that Salah has been under a travel ban since last year. The individual spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisal.
The crisis overshadowed the crown prince’s high-profile economic forum, aimed at raising much needed investments to underwrite his plans to overhaul the Saudi economy.
After the killing, many international business leaders and Western officials pulled out of the forum, including the CEOs of JPMorgan Chase, Uber, Siemens and Blackrock. Western media outlets withdrew as partners for the event.
Instead, the forum spotlighted how the kingdom’s regional allies have rushed to rally behind the crown prince.
On stage with him was Bahrain’s Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa and Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri, who abruptly resigned his post last year during a strange visit to Saudi Arabia in which many people suspected that he was held against his will. Hariri returned to Lebanon and to his post later that year after French mediation and has visited Saudi Arabia and met with the crown prince since then.
The crown prince even joked about the incident at the forum, saying Hariri would be in Saudi Arabia this time for two days.
“So please, no one say that he is kidnapped,” Prince Mohammed said, before turning to Hariri and pumping his hand as the crowd erupted in laughter.

Some $55 Billion in Agreements Were Signed at the Forum

The summit also drew Dubai’s ruler, Jordan’s king and Pakistan’s prime minister. Pakistan, which is grappling with a soaring deficit, struck a deal on the sidelines of the forum with Saudi Arabia for $6 billion in aid from the oil-rich kingdom.
Some $55 billion in agreements were signed at the forum, much of that focused on the lucrative Saudi energy industry. Saudi Arabia is one of the world’s largest exporters of oil, has the Arab world’s largest economy and is a key emerging market.

Some $55 billion in agreements were signed at the forum, much of that focused on the lucrative Saudi energy industry.
Rather than cancel their participation altogether, some companies sent midlevel executives. Outside the hall, hushed conversations over coffee and dates took place, with a flurry of business cards exchanged.
Several participants from the U.S., including a California hedge fund manager and staff from a U.S. desalination company, declined to speak to the AP, reflecting a general nervousness among the Americans.
“This experience has given everyone pause … to stop, get our breath, take stock and then figure out the most appropriate way forward,” David Hamod, president and CEO of the National U.S.-Arab Chamber of Commerce, told the AP.
“At the end of the day, many American companies have stakeholders and shareholders to which they need to be very sensitive. So they will listen to those stakeholders and shareholders,” Hamod said.
“But timing is everything. A fair number of U.S. companies didn’t make the trip, as you know, and that’s an issue of timing,” he said, adding that he believes the relationship will be “very positive” in the long term.

DON'T MISS

Fresno Council Throws Out Plan for South Central, Says It Was Too Strict

DON'T MISS

How Democrat Adam Gray Won His Race, the Last to Be Called in the US House

DON'T MISS

New Coach Matt Entz Promises to Make Bulldog Football ‘Something Special’

DON'T MISS

San Francisco Man Escaped a Merced County Prison 8 Years Ago. He’s Back With New Charges.

DON'T MISS

Fresno Hit-and-Run Big-Rig Driver Sought After Crash

DON'T MISS

She Buys a Ticket to Support a Good Cause, Then Wins the 2024 Granville Home of Hope

DON'T MISS

CA Needs More Water Storage to Handle Boom-or-Bust Cycles

DON'T MISS

Dodgers’ Deferred Payments Top $1 Billion to 7 Players, Including Snell and Edman

DON'T MISS

Feds Close ‘Rape Club’ Women’s Prison in California

DON'T MISS

California Will Appeal Rejection of Lawsuit Over Huntington Beach Voter ID Law

UP NEXT

Digging Resumes in the Search for a Woman in a Pennsylvania Sinkhole

UP NEXT

Syrian Insurgents Capture Central City of Hama in Severe Setback to the Syrian President

UP NEXT

Amnesty International Accuses Israel of Genocide in Gaza War

UP NEXT

A Major Power Plant Fails in Cuba, Plunging the Island Into Darkness — Again

UP NEXT

Israel’s Military Says Hostages Were Likely Killed by Hamas as Airstrike Hit

UP NEXT

Tulare County Explosion Burns Man, Destroys Fifth-Wheel Trailer

UP NEXT

Trump Considers DeSantis for the Pentagon With Hegseth Under Pressure Over Allegations: AP

UP NEXT

Is Enron Back? If It’s a Joke, Some Former Employees Aren’t Laughing

UP NEXT

South Korean President Backs Down From Martial Law Order

UP NEXT

Three Climbers From the US and Canada Are Missing on New Zealand’s Highest Peak

San Francisco Man Escaped a Merced County Prison 8 Years Ago. He’s Back With New Charges.

7 hours ago

Fresno Hit-and-Run Big-Rig Driver Sought After Crash

8 hours ago

She Buys a Ticket to Support a Good Cause, Then Wins the 2024 Granville Home of Hope

10 hours ago

CA Needs More Water Storage to Handle Boom-or-Bust Cycles

10 hours ago

Dodgers’ Deferred Payments Top $1 Billion to 7 Players, Including Snell and Edman

11 hours ago

Feds Close ‘Rape Club’ Women’s Prison in California

11 hours ago

California Will Appeal Rejection of Lawsuit Over Huntington Beach Voter ID Law

11 hours ago

The NWS Cancels Tsunami Warning for the US West Coast After 7.0 Earthquake

11 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Is Fresno’s Project Labor Agreement Meeting Local Hiring Goals?

11 hours ago

‘Embarrassing’: The Lakers Have Lost Their Last 2 Games by a Combined 70 Points

12 hours ago

Fresno Council Throws Out Plan for South Central, Says It Was Too Strict

The Fresno City Council on Thursday rejected a $1 million plan five years in the making that would have determined land use in south central...

6 hours ago

6 hours ago

Fresno Council Throws Out Plan for South Central, Says It Was Too Strict

7 hours ago

How Democrat Adam Gray Won His Race, the Last to Be Called in the US House

7 hours ago

New Coach Matt Entz Promises to Make Bulldog Football ‘Something Special’

A San Francisco man has been indicted after escaping from U.S. Penitentiary Atwater in Merced County and evading capture for eight years. (Wikipedia)
7 hours ago

San Francisco Man Escaped a Merced County Prison 8 Years Ago. He’s Back With New Charges.

CHP is investigating a Fresno hit-and-run where a big rig driver fled after colliding with a pickup at North and Temperance. (CHP)
8 hours ago

Fresno Hit-and-Run Big-Rig Driver Sought After Crash

10 hours ago

She Buys a Ticket to Support a Good Cause, Then Wins the 2024 Granville Home of Hope

10 hours ago

CA Needs More Water Storage to Handle Boom-or-Bust Cycles

11 hours ago

Dodgers’ Deferred Payments Top $1 Billion to 7 Players, Including Snell and Edman

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend