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				After dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi was killed in Saudi 
				Arabia's consulate in Istanbul, Chancellor Angela Merkel said 
				Berlin would authorize no further weapons exports until Riyadh 
				had satisfactorily explained his death.
 Privately-owned Luerssen was commissioned to build the coastal 
				patrol vessels five years ago, and construction began at its 
				Peene Shipyard in 2016.
 
 "Suspending construction and cutting working hours as a direct 
				consequence is a heavy blow to us," said shipyard official 
				Harald Jaekel in a statement. Almost all of Peene's 300 workers 
				would be affected, the statement said.
 
 The uncertainty over future authorizations made production 
				planning impossible, the company added, saying that suspending 
				production was the only way to minimize the resulting risk.
 
 Saudi Arabia makes a major contribution to Germany's defense 
				industry. So far this year, some 400 million euros of exports 
				were approved to the country, making it the second-biggest 
				recipient of German arms after Algeria.
 
 Riyadh at first denied that Khashoggi was dead, before finally 
				conceding under heavy international pressure that he had in fact 
				been killed by Saudi agents.
 
 (Reporting by Thomas Escritt, Editing by William Maclean)
 
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