Khashoggi family denies reaching settlement with Saudi authorities to 'buy their silence'

Salah Khashoggi, the son of murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, has denied being in talks to reach an out of court settlement with Saudi authorities.
4 min read
11 April, 2019
Salah Khashoggi, son of murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, receives mourners in November 2018 [AFP/Getty]

The family of murdered journalist Jamal Khashoggi denied they were in talks to reach a settlement out of court with Saudi authorities on Wednesday, following reports that his sons had taken payouts.

"Currently, the trial is taking place and no settlement discussion had been or is discussed," read an English statement posted to Salah Khashoggi's verified Twitter account.

The Washington Post on April 1 reported Khashoggi's children, including Salah, had received multimillion-dollar homes and were being paid thousands of dollars per month by authorities.

Khashoggi - a contributor to the Post and a critic of the Saudi government - was killed and dismembered in October at the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul by a team of 15 agents from Riyadh. His body has not been recovered.

Saudi Arabia's powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has been widely accused of orchestrating Khashoggi's killing.

In the immediate aftermath of Khashoggi's disappearance in October, Saudi authorities denied knowledge of his whereabouts, however later acknowledged that he had been killed. Riyadh claimed the operation was carried out by agents acting independently. A trial of 11 suspects, their identities unknown, opened earlier this year in Saudi Arabia.

But much of the case remains shrouded, beginning with the role of Saudi Arabia's powerful crown prince and de facto ruler, Mohammad bin Salman.

'Not admission of guilt'

Khashoggi's son said only the family and their attorney were authorised to "claim to be a source of information".

The statement did not openly confirm or deny possible reparations from the Saudi king or crown prince, whom the family called "guardians to all Saudis".

"Acts of generosity and humanity come from the high moral grounds they possess, not admission of guilt or scandal," the statement said.

According to the Post, the payments to his four children "are part of an effort by Saudi Arabia to reach a long-term arrangement with Khashoggi family members, aimed in part at ensuring that they continue to show restraint in their public statements".

None of Khashoggi's children - two sons and two daughters - have publicly criticised the Saudi regime following the murder of their father.

The family receiving compensation could close the case under Saudi law, without any others involved in the killing - such as Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who has been linked to the murder - facing justice.

The Khashoggi murder has sparked international outcry and calls to end arms sales to Saudi Arabia, which leads a regional military campaign battling Yemeni rebels linked to Iran that has led to what the UN describes as the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

US President Donald Trump has been Riyadh's strongest Western ally throughout the Khashoggi affair, phoning Prince Mohammed on Wednesday to discuss "bilateral relations", Saudi state news agency SPA reported.

But Republicans and Democrats have both bristled over the White House's apparent embrace of the kingdom and its leadership.

Saudi in spotlight

At least seven writers and bloggers - including two US citizens - were arrested in Saudi Arabia on Friday, according to rights groups, in the first major crackdown since Khashoggi's murder.

The arrests came the day after US lawmakers voted to end military support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen.

The text cleared the Senate last month and now heads to Trump, who is widely expected to veto the legislation.

The US State Department on Monday also barred entry to 16 Saudi nationals under the Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Act.

The section in question "provides that, in cases where the Secretary of State has credible information that officials of foreign governments have been involved in significant corruption or gross violations of human rights, those individuals and their immediate family members are ineligible for entry into the United States".

The State Department has also frozen the assets of some Saudi citizens over the Khashoggi affair.

Operatives are believed to have been sent from Riyadh to Istanbul to murder and dismember the veteran Saudi journalist, a Washington Post columnist living in the US at the time of the killing, on 2 October last year in the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul.

Khashoggi had already resisted calls from Riyadh to return home to Saudi Arabia fearing the worst, but necessary documents for his planned wedding necessitated a visit to the consulate.

His body is yet to be found, but Turkish investigators allege that the team present at the Saudi consulate burned his corpse in an outdoor furnace located in the Saudi consul's home.

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