Turkey will not drop trial of Saudi suspects in Khashoggi murder
Turkey will not intervene in the trial against the Saudi operatives who are accused of murdering Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Turkish officials told Middle East Eye.
Officials told MEE on Wednesday that there was no change in
Turkey's position on the Khashoggi murder. "Justice will prevail,"
one of the officials said. "There won't be any disruption in Turkey's own
legal process."
The comments came as Saudi authorities permanently closed
eight Turkish state-run schools in the kingdom, further straining ties.
The trial in absentia of 20 Saudi suspects indicted over
Khashoggi's gruesome murder, including two former aides to Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed Bin Salman (MBS), began in Istanbul last July.
Khashoggi, a Middle East Eye and Washington Post columnist,
was killed inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on 2 October 2018 after he
entered the premises to obtain paperwork for his planned marriage to his
Turkish fiancee, Hatice Cengiz. His remains are yet to be found.
Last year, the Istanbul prosecutor filed an indictment that
accused Ahmed al-Asiri, the former deputy head of Saudi Arabia's general
intelligence service, and a former royal court adviser, Saud al-Qahtani, as
having "instigated premeditated murder with monstrous intent".
A Saudi court sentenced five people to death and three
others to jail over the journalist's murder, but dismissed charges against the
senior officials connected to MBS.
However, the trial in Turkey itself is seen by some as a
mostly symbolic step. Experts have said the trial cannot meaningfully continue
without the presence of the defendants because it involves murder.
Relations between Turkey and Saudi Arabia, two regional
powerhouses, have been at a low point since the murder of Khashoggi, whose
killing is believed by the CIA to have been ordered by MBS himself.
Saudi businesses have endorsed an unofficial boycott of
Turkish goods, resulting in a more than 90 percent drop in Turkish exports to
the kingdom. Late last month, Turkey raised concerns regarding boycott to the
World Trade Organisation (WTO).
Ankara has tried to correct the relationship, with officials
from both countries meeting last year after a personal intervention by Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who called Saudi King Salman to repair the
relationship.
Erdogan's chief foreign policy adviser, Ibrahim Kalin, said
earlier this week that Turkey would seek ways to repair its fractured
relationship with the kingdom with a more positive agenda.
"We will seek ways to repair the relationship with a
more positive agenda with Saudi Arabia as well," Kalin said, adding that
he hoped the boycott could be lifted.
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