Photos Show Aide To Saudi Crown Prince Entering Consulate Hours Before Journalist's Disappearance
Saudis
transfer $100M to US Gov, as suspect in Khashoggi murder dies in "car
accident"
Khashoggi
Murder Suspect Dies In "Suspicious Car Accident"
17
October, 2018
A
31-year-old lieutenant in the Saudi Royal Air Force said to
have participated in the killing of Saudi writer Jamal
Khashoggi died
in a "suspicious car accident" in Riyadh, according to
Turkish media.
Mashal
Saad al-Bostani was reportedly on a 15-man hit squad dispatched
to Saudi Arabia's Istanbul Consulate in Turkey on October 2
during Khashoggi's visit, before the team quickly left the
country, according to daily Yeni Şafak.
Albostani entered Turkey at 1:45 a.m. local time (2245GMT). He stayed at the Wyndham Grand Hotel and left the country at 9:46 p.m. local time (1846GMT) on a private jet which belonged to the Sky Prime Aviation company. -Yeni Şafak
Bostani's
alleged role in the murder of the Saudi journalist are unclear,
as are details of the traffic accident in Riyadh - prompting
accusations of a cover up by those who orchestrated the Khashoggi
hit. Meanwhile, a columnist for Turkey's Daily
Hürriyet wrote
on Thursday that Mohammad
al Otaibi, Saudi Arabia's Istanbul consul-general, would be "the
next execution."
Turkish daily Yeni Şafak reported Oct. 17 that Al-Otaibi’s voice could be heard in one of the recordings, which Turkish authorities are believed to have, of Khashoggi’s “interrogation” at the consulate.
According to the report, after Al-Otaibi told the interrogators to “do it somewhere else outside or I will be in trouble,” he was told to “shut up if you want to live when you are back in Saudi Arabia.”
Al-Otaibi returned to Saudi Arabia on Oct. 16 before his residence in Istanbul was searched by police for more than eight hours on Oct. 17 and Oct. 18. -Daily Hürriyet
Another
suspect's photograph was released from security footage on October 18
by the newspaper Sabah, which reports that 47-year-old intelligence
officer Maher Abdulaziz M. Mutreb, who previously served at
Saudi Arabia's London embassy, "landed in Istanbul at 3:38 a.m.
on Oct. 2 and went to his country’s Istanbul consulate at 9:55
a.m.," according to Hürriyet.
Hours after Khashoggi’s arrival and disappearance, Mutreb left the consulate and visited the consul’s residence at 4:53 p.m., left his hotel at 5:15 p.m. and arrived at the Atatürk Airport for his return trip on a private jet at 5:58 p.m. -Daily Hürriyet
Mutreb
had travelled extensively with the crown prince, perhaps as a
bodyguard according to an October 16 report in the New
York Times.
Khashoggi,
a US resident and Washington Post columnist who was critical of the
Saudi government, reportedly took seven
minutes to die adccording
to the
Middle East Eye and the
Wall Street Journal.
In
perhaps the most gruesome details from the report, MEM reported
that Dr. Salah Muhammad al-Tubaigy, who was identified by the Times
and other media outlets as an "autopsy expert" whose
presence cuts against Saudis' suggestions that the killing wasn't
premeditated, started
cutting Khashoggi's body into pieces while the journalist was
unconscious, but still breathing. Previously, Khashoggi had been
knocked unconscious after being injected with a mysterious substance.
Later,
the NYT reported
that the hit squad cut off Khashoggi's fingers while he was still
conscious during an interrogation where he was also beaten and
tortured before being dragged into another room where they finished
butchering him.
According
to WSJ, voices on the tapes can be heard asking the Saudi consul to
leave his office before the hit squad murdered Khashoggi. The
consul, al-Otaibi,
departed Turkey for Riyadh Tuesday afternoon after the Saudis, in a
sudden reversal, denied Turkey's requests to search Otaibi's
residence,
saying his home was off limits to investigators.
Photos Show Aide To Saudi Crown Prince Entering Consulate Hours Before Journalist's Disappearance
17
October, 2018
The
Turkish government is persisting in its campaign to implicate Crown
Prince Mohammad bin Salman in the suspected murder of Saudi dissident
journalist Jamal Khashoggi, working through leaks to Turkish media
and the
New York Times. And
in the latest embarrassing leak, a Turkish newspaper has published
surveillance photos showing Maher Abdulaziz Mutreb, a close associate
of MbS who has been photographed with the Crown Prince on multiple
occasions, entering the Saudi consulate on Oct. 2, just hours before
Khashoggi entered and disappeared.
The
photos also showed Mutreb standing outside the Saudi consul general’s
home, leaving a Turkish hotel with a large suitcase, and leaving
Turkey on a flight from Istanbul’s international airport later in
the day.
Time stamps on the photographs, which Sabah said had been taken from closed-circuit television, showed Mr. Mutreb entering the Saudi consulate at 9:55 a.m., at the consul general’s home at 4:45 p.m., leaving the Istanbul hotel at 5:15 p.m., and at the airport leaving Turkey at 5:58 p.m.
The
Times first
identified Mutreb as
a member of the purported 15-man hit squad earlier this week,
publishing a series of photos showing Mutreb, who was also identified
as a Saudi diplomat, as part of MbS's entourage during visits to
Spain, France and the US.
Between
the UN human rights chief calling for the suspension of diplomatic
immunity for those involved in the killing, to the death of another
purported hit squad member, a 31-year-old lieutenant in the Saudi
Royal Air Force named Mashal Saad al-Bostani in a
mysterious car accident,
Mutreb has good reason to be anxious
The
rulers of Saudi Arabia are considering blaming a top intelligence
official close to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for the killing of
Jamal Khashoggi, three people with knowledge of the Saudi plans said
Thursday.
The
plan to assign blame to Maj. Gen. Ahmed al-Assiri, a high-ranking
adviser to the crown prince, would be an extraordinary recognition of
the magnitude of international backlash to hit the kingdom since the
death of Mr. Khashoggi, a prominent Saudi dissident. A resident of
Virginia and contributor to The Washington Post, Mr. Khashoggi was
last seen entering the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2.
Blaming
General Assiri could also provide a plausible explanation for the
killing and help deflect blame from the crown prince, who American
intelligence agencies are increasingly convinced was behind Mr.
Khashoggi’s disappearance.
Saudis To Blame Top General For Journalist's Killing: NYT
‘It certainly looks like’ Khashoggi is dead, consequences will be ‘severe’ – Trump
The
missing Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi appears to be dead, US
President Donald Trump has told reporters, saying there would be
“severe” consequences for whoever is behind it.
“It
certainly looks that way to me,” Trump
said when asked if Khashoggi was dead. “It's
very sad.”
In
what was the strongest repudiation yet of the Saudi government's
suspected involvement in the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi,
Vice President Mike Pence warned on Thursday during a brief huddle
with reporters on a tarmac in Colorado that "there will be
consequences" if Khashoggi was murdered, and that the US will
not "solely rely" on the results of investigations
organized by the Saudi and Turkish governments.
Pence's
claim that the US won't solely rely on the results of these
investigations echoed remarks made earlier by Secretary of State Mike
Pence, who spoke at the White House Thursday after briefing President
Trump on his trip to Riyadh and Ankara. Pence also said the
allegations about Khashoggi's killing, if true, would be an affront
to press freedoms around the world.
"If
what has been alleged occurred, if an innocent person lost their life
at the hands of violence, that's to be condemned," Pence said.
"If
a journalist in particular lost their life at the hands of violence,
that's an affront to the free and independent press around the
world," he added. "And there will be consequences."
Pence's
comments are notable for the utter lack of credulity regarding the
Saudi's official denials that Khashoggi was killed at their embassy.
While Turkish investigators say they have found evidence that
Khashoggi was likely killed at the consulate during their
investigation (and also purportedly possess an audio recording of
what was allegedly a brutal murder), the Saudis have stuck to their
official denials and said Khashoggi left the consulate shortly after
arriving.
Not
to be outdone, President Trump adopted a slightly more severe tone
Thursday afternoon when he said consequences for Khashoggi's death
"will need to be very severe" if the Saudis are found to
have orchestrated the murder. Trump acknowledged for the first time
that Khashoggi is "probably dead." He hasn't been seen or
heard from since Oct. 2, when he visited the Saudi consulate in
Istanbul to obtain a marriage license. All of this is bad news for
Saudi Gen. Ahmed al-Assiri, an intelligence official whom the Saudis
are reportedly planning to scapegoat for the killing.
The
payment, which the Saudis had committed to in August, reportedly
arrived on the same day that Pompeo landed in Riyadh.
U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrived in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday to
discuss the disappearance and presumed murder of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. That same day, the
U.S. government received a $100 million payment from the oil-rich
kingdom, The New York Times and Washington Post reported — an
amount that had earlier been promised to the Trump administration to
support its stabilization efforts in Syria.
Trump
officials have insisted the timing of the hefty transfer was pure
coincidence. But some Middle Eastern experts say they aren’t so
sure.
“In
all probability, the Saudis want Trump to know that his cooperation
in covering for the Khashoggi affair is important to the Saudi
monarch,” Joshua Landis, director of the University of Oklahoma’s
Center of Middle East Studies, told the Post. “Much of its
financial promises to the U.S. will be contingent on this
cooperation.”
One
U.S. official involved in Syria policy was blunter. “The timing of
this is no coincidence,” the official told the Times.
Brett
McGurk, the U.S. envoy to the coalition fighting the Islamic State,
has maintained, however, that the Saudi payment had no connection
whatsoever to Pompeo’s meeting with the Crown Prince or Khashoggi’s
alleged murder.
Saudi
Arabia had publicly committed the money in August, he said, adding
that “the specific transfer of funds has been long in process and
has nothing to do with other events or the secretary’s visit.”
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