[ad_1]
The last words of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi were "I can not breathe," warning that he has repeated three times about his killers in a Saudi consulate room in Istanbul, Turkey.
Khashoggi was killed at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, on October 2, in connection with an offense which, according to the CIA (American intelligence agency), had been ordered by Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman to silence the journalist, a critic of the regime.
The Turkish press (CNN) said Monday that it had access to a research source having heard a translation of the full audio transcript.
] The source stated that Khashoggi had recognized one of the men present, General Maher Mutreb, who had told him, "You will come back." The reporter reportedly replied, "You can not do this … there are people waiting outside."
Khashoggi's Turkish bride, Hatice Cengiz, waited in front of the consulate for hours. October 2nd. The journalist went to the diplomatic headquarters to ask for the necessary documents for the wedding. When he did not return, Cengiz asked the Turkish authorities to report his disappearance.
Khashoggi began to have trouble breathing when people threw themselves on him. He repeated "I can not breathe" at least three times.
The transcript then used singular words to describe noises in the room, such as "shouting", "gasping", "sawing" and "cutting" – sawing.
The transcript also does not mention the return of Khashoggi in Saudi Arabia and does not indicate that he was drugged – as stated by the Saudi Attorney General.
One of the voices of the transcript was identified by the Turkish authorities as being the doctor Salah al-Tubaigy, expert in forensic medicine specializing in autopsies related to the Ministry of the Interior Saudi, according to CNN .
Tubaigy advises others in the living room to put on headphones or listen to music, as he did, to smother the sound of Khashoggi's body dismemberment.
Mutreb, High Intelligence Authority. A senior security official of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman called officials to explain in detail the unfolding of the operation. CNN said at the end: "Tell your people that it's done, it's done."
Last week, Turkish officials said the Istanbul prosecutor had concluded that "high suspicion" that Saud al-Qahtani, Prince Bin Salman's top advisor, and General Ahmed al-Asiri, director Foreign intelligence services are part of the mentors of Khashoggi's badbadination.
Saudi Arabia stated that the prince had no prior knowledge of the crime. After presenting a number of conflicting explanations, Riyadh claimed that Khashoggi had been killed and his body had been split in four when negotiations to persuade him to return to Saudi Arabia had failed.
Turkey demands the extradition to the country of all crime suspects, but Riyadh Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir rejected the idea last Sunday (9)
Source link