Khashoggi : A year without justice

On October 2, 2018, at 1:14 PM, the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul. He never came out alive.

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) was quick to condemn this crime and today, one year on, renews its calls on the international community to launch an independent investigation to ensure all the intellectual and material perpetrators are put behind bars.

Twelve months after Khashoggi’s killing, there are plenty of unanswered questions. Where is his body? Who ordered his killing? Who sent up to 15 Saudi men - a hit squad including a forensic expert - to Istanbul?  Why did the Saudi authorities, including the Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, consistently deny any knowledge of Khashoggi's fate and only acknowledged his murder a few weeks after?

No light has been shed on any of these questions. On the contrary, the obscurantism and secrecy of the Saudi inquiry highlights even more the need for a transparent and independent international investigation on the case. There must be no impunity.

Since the beginning, the Saudi authorities have given contradictory explanations of what happened. First, they claimed that Khashoggi left the consulate one hour after his arrival. Then they admitted his death saying he was killed by “rogue individuals” who exceeded their responsibilities.

So far, the Saudi justice system has arrested 18 people and five senior officials were fired as part of the investigation. On 3 January, 11 individuals were sent to trial accused of being connected with the killing. However, the trial took place behind closed doors and details of defendants' identity has not been made public.

In addition to the secrecy and lack of transparency of the Saudi judicial proceedings, authorities are trying to buy the Khashoggi’s family silence and cover up the truth, as The Washington Post reported.

Considering the evident efforts of the Saudi authorities to prevent justice from being done, the IFJ has repeatedly called for an independent international investigation to shed light on this gruesome murder.

IFJ General Secretary, Anthony Bellanger, said: “It's been a year since Khashoggi's murder and there’s still no justice for those who ordered and executed his murder. We will continue demanding an international and independent investigation on this crime and rejecting any kind of political cover-up of it. If the perpetrators are not held to account, oppressive governments of the world will see it as a green light to commit crimes against a journalist with impunity. We won’t allow it.”

According to IFJ reports, 95 journalists were killed during 2018 and only one out of 10 killings of journalists is resolved.

For more information, please contact IFJ on +32 2 235 22 16

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