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US judge dismisses case against Saudi crown prince over Khashoggi killing


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Judge says Mohammed bin Salman entitled to sovereign immunity despite ‘credible allegations’ of involvement in journalist’s murder


Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Washington


A US judge has dismissed a lawsuit against Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Salman that claimed he conspired to kill journalist Jamal Khashoggi, saying the crown prince was entitled to sovereign immunity despite “credible allegations” that he was involved in the murder.

 

Judge John Bates, a US district court judge with a long history of presiding over cases involving national security, acknowledged “uneasiness” in making the decision, but said that his hands were in effect tied by the Biden administration’s recent recommendation that Prince Mohammed be given immunity.

 

The decision to dismiss the civil claim, which was brought by Khashoggi’s fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, and Dawn, a pro-democracy group founded by the murdered journalist, likely marks the end of efforts to hold the future Saudi king accountable for the 2018 murder.

 

Full story: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/dec/06/us-judge-saudi-crown-prince-mohammed-bin-salman-khashoggi

 

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-- © Copyright The Guardian 2022-12-07
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1 hour ago, ThaiFelix said:

A journalists life is worth nothing compared to billion dollar oil deals.

Financial pragmatism and international diplomacy always wins, it has to, which world leader doesn't have blood on his or her hands, if normal justice was valid for all no politician could travel with impunity.

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2 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

Sovereign immunity is an awful set of laws. It allows alot of horrific people to get away with truly heinous behavior. MBS is a madman, serial killer. Yet, he is treated with accord and respect, due to his status and his wealth. 

 

Bottom line. Saudi Arabia would be an unknown backwater, without its oil wealth. And the world would be better off without them.

Veni, vidi, vici.

 

No way he drives a Honda.

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As there was a little chance for justice in the USA, they should try in Turkish courts. 
his fiancé is turkish, crime was committed on turkish soil, turkish authorities were willing to blow up its surveillance technique to publicly disclose records of this murder. 
Turkey was not scared to do so, even if they were not implicated in any form. 
Saudi are large importers of american armaments. Trump signed a large contract for tens of billions. Even if Trump was vocal at the time of murder, his declarations meant nothing a few months later, at signing of this contract. 
Biden travelled to saudi the last year begging for oil from saudi reserves in exchange for more weapons. And they got a deal. 
 

i think the US courts are selective in taking international cases, to suit their foreign policy

 

Edited by internationalism
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12 hours ago, internationalism said:

As there was a little chance for justice in the USA, they should try in Turkish courts. 
his fiancé is turkish, crime was committed on turkish soil, turkish authorities were willing to blow up its surveillance technique to publicly disclose records of this murder. 
Turkey was not scared to do so, even if they were not implicated in any form. 
Saudi are large importers of american armaments. Trump signed a large contract for tens of billions. Even if Trump was vocal at the time of murder, his declarations meant nothing a few months later, at signing of this contract. 
Biden travelled to saudi the last year begging for oil from saudi reserves in exchange for more weapons. And they got a deal. 
 

i think the US courts are selective in taking international cases, to suit their foreign policy

 

Turkey has since moved on and is no longer interested in antagonizing the Saudis.

 

Turkey to send case against Khashoggi’s alleged killers to Saudi Arabia
Suspension of trial reflects President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s desire to strengthen trade and political links with Middle East

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/apr/07/turkish-court-sends-case-of-26-accused-over-khashoggi-killing-to-saudi-arabia

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