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News ID: 104059
Publish Date : 25 June 2022 - 21:39

Report: Turkish Court Closed Khashoggi Case Ahead of MBS Visit

ANKARA (Middle East Eye) – A Turkish court closed the case into the killing of Jamal Khashoggi on 17 June, five days before Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman visited Ankara, it has emerged.
Istanbul’s 11th Heavy Penal Court shut down the case on Friday, citing a set of legal reasons, according to documents seen by MEE. Saudi judicial authorities had said many of the suspects had already been tried in the kingdom.
The Istanbul court said a statement from Riyadh Criminal Court’s First Joint Chamber said 10 of the 26 suspects had already been tried in the kingdom, receiving sentences of up to 20 years in prison, making the Turkish trial unnecessary.
Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist, was killed inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on 2 October 2018, in a murder that shocked the world and which continues to have ramifications.
Ankara-Riyadh relations worsened significantly after the killing, but Turkey has since sought to mend ties with Saudi Arabia in a bid to bolster its economy.
Turkey met one of the kingdom’s key demands earlier this year when it handed over the case to Saudi Arabia.
The Riyadh court, after inspecting the Turkish court dossier on the assassination, also decided that there was no fresh evidence to suggest the 11 remaining suspects should be retried.
Hatice Cengiz, Khashoggi’s fiancee, still has a right to appeal the decision in one of Turkey’s higher court. But if that court upholds the ruling, Cengiz has only one option: A second lawsuit in a U.S. federal court filed alongside the U.S.-based advocacy group Democracy for the Arab World Now (Dawn), which Khashoggi established and ran.
The judge in the Washington lawsuit has yet to rule whether the court has jurisdiction. If it does, the lawsuit could open what one source described as a “Pandora’s box” of information, with the court potentially demanding that the Saudi crown prince gives evidence in person.