MBS wants Turkey's president to stop mentioning Jamal Khashoggi murder
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman wants Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to promise that he won't mention journalist
Jamal Khashoggi's murder again, The Wall Street Journal reported.
Erdogan said he plans to visit Saudi Arabia next month after
bin Salman reportedly invited him. The move is an effort to overcome tensions
between the two nations that were further strained after Khashoggi was killed
in a Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018.
Khashoggi entered the consulate on October 2, 2018, to pick
up marital documents needed to marry his Turkish fiancée, Hatice Cengiz, but
never came out.
Turkish officials have alleged that Khashoggi was killed
inside the consulate and that his body was dismembered with a bone saw.
Officials from the US and the United Nations have also corroborated these
allegations. His remains have yet to be found.
A declassified CIA intelligence report directly implicated
the Saudi crown prince in Khashoggi's murder.
A Turkish court is trying 26 Saudi nationals connected with
the murder in absentia, with the next trial date set for July 8, Insider's Azmi
Haroun previously reported.
Saudia Arabia, on the other hand, put 11 people on trial for
what they said was a "rogue operation" in Khashoggi's killing. In
December 2019, the Riyadh Criminal Court sentenced five of them to death. Three
others were given prison sentences.
However, multiple members of the hit squad that killed
Khashoggi are believed to be living in luxury villas in a government-run Saudi
security compound, The Guardian reported last week.
The Journal reported that Saudi Arabia has not confirmed the
meeting between the Saudi crown prince and Erdogan but people familiar with the
efforts have told the outlet that the two leaders have been trying to meet for
weeks.
While bin Salman's goal may be to ease the diplomatic issues
and narrative following Khashoggi's killing, Erdogan may be moving forward with
the meeting for economic support to help with Turkey's currency crisis, the
Journal reported.
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