A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, October 22, 2018
Turkey’s President Vows to Detail Khashoggi Death ‘in Full Nakedness’
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey greeting members of Parliament in Ankara last week.CreditCreditUmit Bektas/Reuters
By Carlotta Gall and Ben Hubbard-Oct. 21, 2018
ISTANBUL — President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, turning up the
pressure on Saudi Arabia, promised Sunday to reveal everything his
country knows about the killing of Jamal Khashoggi inside a Saudi
consulate.
Mr. Erdogan’s statement came as the Saudi foreign minister publicly
apologized to Mr. Khashoggi’s family, but stuck with his government’s
contention that the killing had been a “tremendous mistake” by Saudi
operatives acting “outside the scope of their authority.”
Turkish officials have suggested that Mr. Khashoggi’s death was ordered
at the highest levels of the kingdom. And Mr. Erdogan, who has commented
little on the matter publicly, on Sunday indicated that he has more to
say about what happened.
“We said that we will reveal it,” Mr. Erdogan said in a speech broadcast
live on Sunday. “God willing, I will make my statement about Jamal
Khashoggi in the parliamentary group on Tuesday.”
Mr. Khashoggi, a journalist critical of the Saudi government,
disappeared after entering its consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2. Turkey
and Saudi Arabia have conducted what has been described as a joint
investigation into Mr. Khashoggi’s disappearance, conducting searches of
both the consulate building and the nearby residence of the Saudi
consul.
On Saturday, Saudi Arabia announced that Mr. Khashoggi had been killed in a “brawl” inside
the consulate, its first acknowledgment that he was dead, and that
Saudis were responsible. It said 18 Saudis involved in the case had been
detained.
The statement followed weeks of Saudi insistence that Mr. Khashoggi had left the consulate, unharmed, hours after entering.
On Sunday, in an interview with Fox News, Foreign Minister Adel
al-Jubeir said, “There obviously was a tremendous mistake made, and what
compounded the mistake would be the attempt to try to cover up.”
Asked if he had a message for Mr. Khashoggi’s relatives, Mr. Jubeir
said: “This is a terrible mistake. This is a terrible tragedy. Our
condolences go out to them. We feel their pain.”
Image-A Turkish police officer looking around the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul last week.CreditChris Mcgrath/Getty Images
Turkish officials have indicated that the Saudi version — that Mr.
Khashoggi died in a botched attempt at interrogation and abduction —
does not fully satisfy them.
For several days, Turkish officials speaking anonymously have told news
organizations that a team of 15 Saudis flew to Istanbul on Oct. 2 to
kill Mr. Khashoggi, most likely on the orders of the crown prince,
Mohammed bin Salman. They have even claimed to have recordings of his torture and killing.
“We are searching for justice and it will be revealed in full
nakedness,” Mr. Erdogan said on Sunday afternoon, at an event to open a
new subway line in Istanbul. “Not with ordinary steps, but in full
nakedness.”
“Why did 15 people come here?” he asked. “Why have 18 people been
arrested? All of this must be explained with all the details. On
Tuesday, I will tell this very differently in my parliamentary group
speech. I will go into detail.”
Mr. Erdogan’s comments came as Saudi Arabia was accused of deception in
the case by both President Trump and the publisher of The Washington
Post, for which Mr. Khashoggi wrote columns.
Mr. Trump, in another shift of tone against Saudi Arabia, expressed
doubt about the Saudi government’s claim that Mr. Khashoggi was killed
accidentally. “Obviously, there’s been deception and there’s been
lies,” Mr. Trump said in a telephone interview with The Post. “Their stories are all over the place.”
Fred Ryan, the paper’s publisher, said the Saudi government had “shamefully and repeatedly offered one lie after another.”
“Offering no proof, and contrary to all available evidence,” Mr. Ryan said on Twitter,
“they now expect the world to believe that Jamal died in a fight
following a discussion. This is not an explanation; it is a cover-up.”
Mr. Erdogan had been uncharacteristically quiet about the scandal around
Mr. Khashoggi’s disappearance, even as a steady stream of leaks from
his own government helped the case capture the world’s attention and
shook relations between Saudi Arabia and the United States.
Yet Mr. Erdogan, who knew Mr. Khashoggi personally and took great
affront at how Saudi Arabia handled the affair, did use information
gathered by his intelligence services to pressure the Saudis into owning
up.
In particular, Mr. Erdogan has aimed some of his ire toward Crown Prince Mohammed, whose firm grip on power in
the kingdom has been called into question over the death of Mr.
Khashoggi. Mr. Erdogan made an apparent swipe at the crown prince in his
speech Sunday.
“And right now, what does the world say about whom?” he said. “We will look into all of this.”
Mr. Khashoggi, who for years was close to the Saudi royal family, became a critic as Crown Prince Mohammed cracked down on dissent, moving to the United States.
Image-Turkish police officers in front of Saudi consul general’s residence while waiting for investigators to arrive last week.CreditChris Mcgrath/Getty Images
Mr. Jubeir, the foreign minister, stuck to his government’s insistence
that the kingdom’s leadership did not know of the operation to confront
Mr. Khashoggi in the consulate in Istanbul, and that it did not know at
first that he had been killed.
He specifically denied that the crown prince knew of the operation ahead
of time, “The individuals who did this did this outside the scope of
their authority,” Mr. Jubeir said.
It was not until some time after the killing that Saudi leaders realized
that their account contradicted the information the Turks had, he said.
“We discovered that he was killed in the consulate,” he said. “We don’t
know in terms of details how. We don’t know where the body is.”
Turkish officials have said that Mr. Khashoggi’s body was dismembered by
a Saudi forensics expert using a bone saw, and then disposed of. In
recent days, investigators have combed through sites, including a forest
just outside Istanbul and a farmhouse south the city, looking for
evidence of his fate.
In comments published Saturday in the newspaper Hurriyet, Mr. Erdogan
said he had expressed his irritation at the Saudi handling of the case
to a Saudi delegation sent from Riyadh, and also in a phone conversation
with King Salman last week.
He said he had complained about the actions of the Saudi consul, who did
not cooperate with Turkish officials but invited a camera crew into the
building to show that Mr. Khashoggi was not there. Turkish
investigators were not allowed to search the consulate until 13 days
after Mr. Khashoggi went there.
“At the end of the day, Saudi Arabia has to shed light on this,” Mr.
Erdogan told Hurriyet. “It’s not possible for us to leave this
unfinished.”
Pro-government Turkish columnists have been echoing the sentiment that
Saudi Arabia should come clean. Several have even called for Crown
Prince Mohammed to step down.
“Naturally the U.S.A. and Saudi Arabia are pleased with the development
of events — both have the desire ‘Let’s wrap up it as it is,’” one
columnist, Mahmut Ovur of the staunchly pro-government daily Sabah,
wrote on Sunday.
The crown prince, he wrote, “has no chance to emerge clean from this.”
