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Published 19 Nov, 2022 07:06am

Immunity for MBS in Khashoggi case angers rights groups

WASHINGTON: Human rights groups on Friday accused the Biden administration of “deep betrayal”, as it granted immunity to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in a lawsuit over the 2018 killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.

The US administration conveyed its determination to a court hearing the lawsuit filed by the journalist’s ex-fiancée Hatice Cengiz and the rights group Khashoggi founded, Democracy for the Arab World Now.

Granting him immunity in this way has provoked a storm of protest from human rights groups as well as Mr Khashoggi’s fiancée.

Amnesty International Secretary General Agnes Callamard called the recommendation a “deep betrayal”. In a tweet released on Friday, she wrote: “Today it is immunity. It all adds up to impunity.”

Amnesty International official calls move a ‘deep betrayal’

On Twitter, Ms Cengiz wrote: “Jamal died again today”.

The US Justice Department on Thursday shared the immunity determination with a US district court in Washington, DC, saying that the Saudi crown prince was recently also made the kingdom’s prime minister and therefore “qualifies for immunity as a foreign head of government”.

The determination was made by the US Department of State, which supervises America’s relations with other nations and maintains diplomatic ties with them.

The Justice Department submitted the document late Thursday night, just hours before the court’s deadline for hearing the administration’s views on the immunity question expired. The court is also hearing the prince’s arguments for dismissing the lawsuit because he enjoyed immunity.

The Saudi crown prince’s status formally changed in September when he was named prime minister. In Saudi Arabia, power rests with the king, the crown prince, and the immediate, blood-related royals. The prince has been all-powerful since he became the heir to the throne in 2017.

As Crown Prince, MBS was not entitled to sovereign immunity that would normally just include a head of state, head of government or foreign minister.

Diplomatic observers in Washington say he was made the PM to enable the Biden administration to grant him immunity. They argue that no US administration was ever going to facilitate the arrest of the de facto ruler of a strategic partner like Saudi Arabia. “Mohammed bin Salman, the Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, is the sitting head of government and, accordingly, is immune from this suit,” said the Biden administration while explaining why it was seeking immunity for the prince.

The administration, however, also called the murder “heinous”.

In previous statements, US administrations had acknowledged that the murder was committed at the prince’s direction.

Reports in the US media noted that US-Saudi relations were passing through a difficult patch and the White House had hoped the July trip by President Joe Biden to Saudi Arabia would get the rocky relationship back on track, but it did not happen.

The reports pointed out that the US Congress, already infuriated by recent Saudi oil cut, was calling for a reevaluation of the US-Saudi ties. “The immunity will make them angrier,” one of the commentators said.

Published in Dawn, November 19th, 2022

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