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		Saudis sent 'clean-up' team to Turkey 
		after Khashoggi killing, official says 
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		 [November 05, 2018] 
		By Orhan Coskun 
 ANKARA (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia sent a 
		two-man "clean-up team" to erase evidence of journalist Jamal 
		Khashoggi's killing a week after he disappeared at the Saudi consulate 
		in Istanbul, a Turkish official said on Monday, calling it a sign top 
		Saudi officials knew of the crime.
 
 Confirming a report in Turkey's pro-government Sabah newspaper, the 
		official said the chemist and toxicologist were tasked with erasing 
		evidence before Turkish investigators were given access to the Saudi 
		consulate and consul's residence.
 
 Sabah identified the two men as Ahmed Abdulaziz al-Jonabi and Khaled 
		Yahya al-Zahrani, saying they arrived in Turkey as part of an 11-person 
		team sent to carry out the inspections with Turkish officials.
 
 Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist critical of the Saudi government 
		and its de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, disappeared at 
		the consulate on Oct. 2.
 
 Saudi officials initially insisted Khashoggi had left the consulate, 
		then said he died in an unplanned "rogue operation". The kingdom's 
		public prosecutor Saud al-Mojeb later said he was killed in a 
		premeditated attack.
 
 Turkish and Saudi officials have carried out joint inspections of the 
		consulate and consul's residence in Istanbul, but President Tayyip 
		Erdogan says some Saudi officials are still trying to cover up the 
		crime. Ankara has also demanded Riyadh cooperate in finding Khashoggi's 
		body, which Istanbul's chief prosecutor said had been dismembered.
 
		
		 
		
 A senior Turkish official confirmed the names of the men identified on 
		Monday by Sabah. "We believe that the two individuals came to Turkey for 
		the sole purpose of covering up evidence of Jamal Khashoggi's murder 
		before the Turkish police were allowed to search the premises," the 
		official said.
 
 The two individuals carried out clean-up operations at the consulate and 
		the consul's residence in Istanbul until October 17 and left the country 
		three days later, he said.
 
 "The fact that a clean-up team was dispatched from Saudi Arabia nine 
		days after the murder suggests that Khashoggi's slaying was within the 
		knowledge of top Saudi officials," the official said.
 
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			A demonstrator holds a poster with a picture of Saudi journalist 
			Jamal Khashoggi outside the Saudi Arabia consulate in Istanbul, 
			Turkey October 25, 2018. REUTERS/Osman Orsal 
            
			 
            Saudi Arabia says 18 people have been detained over Khashoggi's 
			killing and the head of its human rights commission told a meeting 
			in Geneva on Monday Riyadh was investigating the case with a view to 
			prosecuting the perpetrators.
 ACID REPORTS
 
 Saudi Arabia's conflicting accounts of Khashoggi's killing have 
			prompted international outcry against the world's top oil exporter, 
			upending the young crown prince's international image as a reformer.
 
 Turkey has released a stream of evidence challenging the initial 
			Saudi denials of involvement, and continues to press Riyadh for 
			details.
 
 On Monday Vice President Fuat Oktay called for an investigation into 
			newspaper reports last week that Khashoggi's body was disposed of by 
			dissolving it in acid.
 
 "The question now is who gave the orders. This is what we are 
			seeking answers to now," Fuat Oktay told Anadolu news agency. 
			"Another question is where the body is... There are reports of (the 
			body) being dissolved with acid now. All of these need to be looked 
			at".
 
 In an article in the Washington Post on Friday, Erdogan said the 
			order to kill Khashoggi came from the "highest levels" of the Saudi 
			government and called for the "puppetmasters" to be unmasked.
 
 (Reporting by Orhan Coskun and Tuvan Gumrukcu; Writing by Dominic 
			Evans)
 
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