UN Report Declares That Prince Mohammed Bin Salman Gave The Direct Order To Murder Jamal Khashoggi
In November 2018, I surmised that the murder of Jamal Khashoggi was a plot by the Saudi royal family elites to secure their power against what they perceived were dangerous moves by members of the younger generation while also attacking Turkey at the same time. I noted that the murder may have been instigated at the insistence of Jared Kushner, and that in March 2019, the younger Mohammed bin Salman was stripped of many of his duties by the House of Saud, and that the Saudis were caught red-handed incinerating Khashoggi’s body in a giant barbecue.
A report from the UN has confirmed at the very least that, details aside, Mohammed bin Salman gave the direct order to murder Jamal Khashoggi, thus formally and fully implicating him in the murder:
A United Nations expert and special rapporteur has submitted a 101-page report calling on UN secretary-general António Guterres to initiate a “follow-up criminal investigation” after finding “sufficient credible evidence” that the grisly Oct. 2 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul was on the direct orders of crown prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) and other high level officials.
Agnes Callamard, the UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, described in her report that Khashoggi was the “victim of a deliberate, premeditated execution, an extrajudicial killing for which the state of Saudi Arabia is responsible under international human rights law”.
The report, the culmination of a six month investigation, said further: “Indeed, this human rights inquiry has shown that there is sufficient credible evidence regarding the responsibility of the crown prince demanding further investigation,” according to FT.
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Callamard was granted rare access to a number of the recordings of conversations inside the consulate – during and surrounding the murder – which involved Khashoggi’s body likely being hacked up, according to prior reports.
“The Turkish authorities undoubtedly have more information and intelligence about events in the Saudi Consulate than they were willing or able to share with the inquiry,” the report said.
However, the new UN report contains more shocking details from the recordings concerning the gruesome manner of Kashoggi’s death. According to a CNN summary of this section of the report:
According to the report — which cites evidence from Turkish and other intelligence agencies — after entering the consulate, Khashoggi was injected with a sedative and then his head put inside a plastic bag and suffocated.
It quotes an audio recording from inside the consulate, in which Khashoggi is heard being told he will be taken to Saudi Arabia.
“We will have to take you back. There is an order from Interpol,” a Saudi man tells the journalist, who replies that “there isn’t a case against me” and warns them that people are waiting for him outside the consulate.
The men instruct Khashoggi to write a text message to his son, and argue over what he should say before a voice says, “cut it short.”
“There is a towel here. Are you going to give me drugs?” Khashoggi asks.
“We will anesthetize you,” a man responds.
A struggle can then be heard, after which a man asks whether Khashoggi has passed out.
“He raises his head.”
“Keep pushing.”
“Push here; don’t remove your hand; push it.”
It has previously been reported that after Khashoggi was killed, his body was dismembered and removed from the consulate in separate bags. It has not been found.
And further the special rapporteur found evidence that the crime scenes were likely “thoroughly, even forensically, cleaned” — suggesting that the Saudi investigation was “not conducted in good faith, and that it may amount to obstructing justice.”
Crucially, the report goes so far as to recommend international sanctions against crown prince MbS as a broader final UN investigation unfolds, similar to those already brought against top MbS aide Saud al-Qahtani and over a dozen others by the US and some European countries.
The report recommended that “such sanctions ought also to include the Crown Prince and his personal assets abroad” unless he is able to definitively prove no responsibility in the murder.
MbS has consistently denied any role in Khashoggi’s death; instead, Riyadh put 11 Saudi suspects on trial that were part of what officials claimed was a “rogue operation” – an allegation met with deep skepticism among Saudi allies and international human rights groups. (source, source)
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