- French police acted on Turkish arrest warrant
- Saudi Embassy says person arrested “has nothing to do with case”
- Police source says extradition hearing due on Wednesday
PARIS, Dec 7 (Reuters) – French police on Tuesday arrested a suspected member of the hit squad that killed Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi as the man was about to board a flight from Paris to Riyadh, French law enforcement sources said.
Khashoggi’s fiancee welcomed the detention of the suspect and said he should be prosecuted for his role in the 2018 killing. But the Saudi Embassy in Paris said the arrested person “has nothing to do with the case in question.”
“Therefore the Kingdom’s embassy expects his immediate release,” it said in a statement.
Register now for FREE unlimited access to reuters.com
Register
A French police source and a judicial source named the man as Khaled Aedh Al-Otaibi – the same name as a former member of the Saudi Royal Guard who is identified in U.S. and British sanctions lists, and a U.N.-commissioned report, as having been involved in Khashoggi’s killing.
The police who detained him were acting on a 2019 arrest warrant issued by Turkey, the country where Khashoggi was killed, according to the police source.
Khashoggi, a Washington Post journalist and critic of Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was last seen entering the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2, 2018. Turkish officials believe his body was dismembered and removed. His remains have not been found.
A U.S. intelligence report released in Marchthis year said Prince Mohammed had approved the operation to kill or capture Khashoggi. The Saudi government has denied any involvement by the crown prince and rejected the report’s findings.
Last year, a Saudi court jailed eight people for between seven and 20 years over the killing, but none of the defendants was named. The trial was criticised by a U.N. official and human rights campaigners who said the masterminds of the murder remained free.
“This could be a major breakthrough in the quest for justice for Jamal Khashoggi,” former U.N. investigator Agnes Callamard said of the Paris detention.
In her 2019 report for the United Nations, Callamard named Al-Otaibi as being part of a Saudi team that killed Khashoggi and dismembered his body before flying back to Saudi Arabia.
Callamard, now head of rights group Amnesty International, said more confirmation was required to prove that the man held in France is the same person she identified in her report.
The police source said the detained man was being held at a border police detention facility at Charles de Gaulle airport, near Paris, and would be taken to court in the centre of the city on Wednesday morning for a hearing on his extradition to Turkey.
Last weekend, French President EmmanuelMacron held face-to-face talks in Saudi Arabia with Prince Mohammed, becoming the first major Western leader to visit the kingdom since Khashoggi’s murder.
‘MISTAKEN IDENTITY’
It was unclear how or when Al-Otaibi arrived in France.
The French Interior Ministry declined to comment. Turkish officials said they were waiting for confirmation of the detained man’s identity.
A Saudi official told Reuters: “Media reports suggesting that a person who was implicated in the crime against Saudi citizen Jamal Khashoggi has been arrested in France are false.”
“This is a case of mistaken identity. Those convicted of the crime are currently serving their sentences in Saudi Arabia.”
Khashoggi’s fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, said on Twitter: “I welcome the arrest today of one of Jamal’s killers today in France.”
“France should try him for his crime, or extradite him to a country able and willing to genuinely investigate and prosecute him as well as the person who gave the order to murder Jamal,” Cengiz said.
The2019 report compiled by Callamard said Al-Otaibi was a member of a 15-man Saudi team involved in killing Khashoggiafter the journalist went to the consulate to obtain a document to allow him to marry his fiancee.
That report said Al-Otaibi was one of five members of the team who were not in the consulate itself – where the report said the killing took place – but in the consul general’s residence.
A report by Britain’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation said Al-Otaibi was “involved in the concealment of evidence at the Saudi General Consul’s residence following the killing.” A U.S. Treasury Departmentreport named Al-Otaibi as among those involved in Khashoggi’s killing.
Register now for FREE unlimited access to reuters.com
Register
Reporting by Alain Acco and Tassilo Hummel; Additional reporting by Geert De Clercq, John Irish, Tangi Salaun, Ghaida Ghantous; Writing by Ingrid Melander and Christian Lowe; Editing by Peter Cooney
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.