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Saudi prosecutors have said the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi was pre-planned, a state-run media house reported on Thursday, 25 October. This reaction brings yet another change in the shifting Saudi Arabian account of what happened to Khashoggi, who was killed by Saudi officials in their Istanbul consulate.
Saudi Arabia initially insisted Khashoggi had walked out of the consulate after visiting the building on 2 October. It later dropped that account for a new one, saying it had detained 18 people for what it said was an accidental killing during a "fistfight."
Many countries responded to the version of a brawl involving Khashoggi with skepticism and demands for transparency. Turkey has been turning up the pressure on Saudi Arabia, a regional rival, to reveal more about the crime.
The seemingly clumsy cover-up of the killing has been exposed to the world with Turkish leaks of information, security camera footage and, eventually, Saudi acknowledgements that Khashoggi died in the consulate.
Key mysteries yet to be explained are suspicions that Saudi Arabia's crown prince ordered the killing — even though he publicly condemned it — and the whereabouts of the Washington Post columnist's body.
"There is a crime here, but there is also a humanitarian situation. The family wants to know and they want to perform their last duty," Cavusoglu said, referring to hopes for the writer's burial.
The official could not confirm whether Haspel had listened to an alleged audio recording of the killing. Pro-government media in Turkey reported officials have such a recording, but its existence has not been confirmed.
On Thursday, conflicting reports surfaced about whether investigators had searched a well in the garden of Saudi Arabia's consulate as part of their probe.
Investigators emptied the well and are awaiting the results of an analysis of the water to determine whether body parts were dumped there, according to Yeni Safak, a pro-government Turkish newspaper.
Turkish media have also published a security camera image allegedly showing a vehicle belonging to the Saudi Consulate "scouting" a forest in the outskirts of Istanbul before Khashoggi was killed.
The image, obtained by state television TRT and other media on Wednesday, shows a black car with a diplomatic license plate at an entrance to Belgrade Forest.
Turkish officials have told The Associated Press that investigators were looking into the possibility that the journalist's remains may have been hidden at those two locations.
(Published in an arrangement with The Associated Press)
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