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Jamal Khashoggi disappearance: Last column published

Turkish officers again searched the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Wednesday and Thursday

The Washington Post has published missing Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi's last column - a call for press freedom across the Arab world.

The newspaper said it decided to go ahead after accepting Mr Khashoggi was not going to return safely.

The journalist has not been seen since entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on 2 October, where Turkish officials allege he was killed.

Saudi Arabia, which denies the killing, allowed investigators inside overnight.

Turkish crime scene teams were seen leaving the consulate early on Thursday morning.

Sources close to the investigation have said they have audio evidence of Mr Khashoggi's torture and eventual murder at the consulate.

However, these have not been made public.

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump said the US has asked for the recording "if it exists".

Meanwhile, politicians from around the world have said they will not be attending an investment conference in Saudi Arabia next week. However, a number of major businesses - including Goldman Sachs, Pepsi and EDF - were still intending to go despite growing pressure for a boycott.

What did the last column say?

The Post's Global Opinions editor Karen Attiah said the column "perfectly captures [Mr Khashoggi's] commitment and passion for freedom in the Arab world", adding it was "a freedom he apparently gave his life for".

Ms Attiah revealed it was submitted the day after Mr Khashoggi went missing. For some time, she "hoped Jamal would come back to us so that he and I could edit it together", Ms Attiah wrote. But realising this was "not going to happen", it was decided to publish the column.

In it, Mr Khashoggi - who went into self-imposed exile last year after reportedly being warned by Saudi officials to stop criticising the crown prince's policies - presented a strong criticism of the state of press freedom in the Arab world, which, he claimed, leaves its people "either uninformed or misinformed".

"The Arab world is facing its own version of an Iron Curtain, imposed not by external actors but through domestic forces vying for power," he wrote.

"The Arab world needs a modern version of the old transnational media so citizens can be informed about global events. More important, we need to provide a platform for Arab voices."

He mentioned the case of his fellow Saudi writer, Saleh al-Shehi, who he said "is now serving an unwarranted five-year prison sentence for supposed comments contrary to the Saudi establishment".

"Such actions no longer carry the consequence of a backlash from the international community," he wrote. "Instead, these actions may trigger condemnation quickly followed by silence."

The result, he said, was that governments had "free rein" to silence the media.

Jamal Khashoggi disappearance: The key events

2 October

-03:28: A private jet carrying suspected Saudi agents arrives at Istanbul airport. A second joins it late afternoon

-12:13: Several diplomatic vehicles are filmed arriving at the consulate, allegedly carrying some of the Saudi agents

-13:14: Mr Khashoggi enters the building, where he is due to pick up paperwork ahead of his marriage

-15:08: Vehicles leave the consulate and are filmed arriving at the nearby Saudi consul's residence

-21:00: Both jets leave Turkey by 21:00

3 October

-Turkish government announces Mr Khashoggi is missing, thought to be in the consulate

4 October

-Saudi Arabia says he left the embassy

7 October

-Turkish officials tell the BBC they believed Mr Khashoggi was killed at the consulate. This is later strongly denied by Saudi Arabia

13 October

-Turkish officials tell BBC Arabic they have audio and video evidence of the killing . The existence of such tapes had previously been reported by local media

15 and 17-18 October

-Forensic teams carry out searches of consulate

How is Turkey's investigation progressing?

On Wednesday and into Thursday, investigators spent almost nine hours searching the Saudi consul's residence, then moving on to the consulate itself about 200m (650ft) away, according to Reuters news agency.

The team included prosecutors and forensics experts in white overalls.

Several vehicles with Saudi diplomatic number plates were filmed by CCTV cameras moving from the consulate to the residence just under than two hours after Mr Khashoggi entered the consulate on the day he vanished.

The consulate building was searched for the first time on Monday.

What is Trump's latest position?

Saudi Arabia is one of Washington's closest allies and the Khashoggi disappearance is putting the administration in an awkward position.

Confirming that the tape said to provide evidence of the killing had been requested, Mr Trump added: "I'm not sure yet that it exists, probably does, possibly does."

Mr Trump said he expected a report from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who has just been to Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

The president said the truth would come out "by the end of the week".

He rejected suggestions he was trying to provide cover for Saudi Arabia: "No, not at all, I just want to find out what's happening."

Over the past few days, Mr Trump has raised the possibility of "rogue killers" being behind the journalist's disappearance. And he has cautioned against rushing to blame Saudi leaders, telling the Associated Press news agency that they were being treated as "guilty until proven innocent".

What is reported to be on the recording?

The existence of audio evidence that Mr Khashoggi - a critic of Saudi leaders - was murdered was revealed by Turkish investigators early on in their inquiries.

Reports in Turkish media give gruesome details of what are said to be his final minutes, including screams.

A Turkish newspaper says the consul himself, Mohammed al-Otaibi, can be heard in the audio recording of Mr Khashoggi's death.

Yeni Safak, which is close to the government, quotes him as telling alleged Saudi agents sent to Istanbul: "Do this outside. You're going to get me in trouble."

The New York Times reports that four of the 15 agents have links to Crown Prince Mohammed, while another is a senior figure in the country's interior ministry.

Mr Otaibi flew back to Riyadh on Tuesday.

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