Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman thought he could put an end to freedom of opinion with a chainsaw, but he was illusory.His only one voice was kept silent by the murder of our courageous fellow Jamal Khashoggi.The discussion continued and the attempt to achieve Khashoggi's freedom, tolerance and understanding between cultures continued.

With this introduction, the Washington Post began a special coverage of 15 articles it made on the first anniversary of the killing of Khashoggi on October 2 last year at his country's consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, which included opinions from different Zoya on this crime, including politics, media and human rights.

The Washington Post chose a book and public figures involved in one way or another, such as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Yemeni human rights activist Tawakkol Karman, Saudi activist Hala Al-Dosari, US Senator Robert Manendez, Khatib Khashoggi Khadija Genghis and Egyptian-American human rights activist Mohammed Sultan. Notable newspaper writers, such as editorial editor Fred Hayat, publisher Fred Ryan, writer David Ignacius and writer Karen Attia.
Summaries of some of these articles are published in the following lines.

Fred Ryan: Why will the world not forget the horror of Khashoggi's murder?
Why the world will not forget the horror of Khashoggi's assassination, Farid Ryan said in his article that no matter how horrific the news is and how severe it is, there are so horrible acts that nothing else can make the public forget it.

He attributed the impossibility of forgetting the American public this crime to the following reasons:
First, the satanic and insane nature of this crime, secondly, the perpetrator being a great ally of America, thirdly, the American reaction in which the US administration failed to defend its values ​​based on press freedom and human rights, and fourthly, the administration's unjustified contempt for the CIA and the UN. And Congress.

Robert Manendez: Trump Khan is America's moral leadership with Saudi Arabia
That is why US Senator Robert Manendez says in his article that President Donald Trump has betrayed America's moral leadership to please Saudi Arabia, which prompted Congress to act.

"We will continue to demand accountability and pressure for justice and work to restore the integrity of our national institutions," he said.

Erdogan says he is still looking for answers to three crucial questions (Anatolia)

Erdogan: Turkey will continue its efforts to highlight the killing of Khashoggi
This insistence is the same expressed by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in his article on this anniversary, stressing that Turkey will continue its efforts to highlight the murder of Khashoggi, pointing out that his country does not target its ally and friend Saudi Arabia or King Salman bin Abdul Dear, but rather thugs who killed Khashoggi.

He cited in this context, for example, Turkey that a true friend is facing a friend with facts at all times, stressing that Turkey will continue to look for an answer to the following questions: Where is the body of Khashoggi? Who signed the execution note of this Saudi journalist? Who sent the 15 killers on the planes to Istanbul?

"It is in our interest and in the interest of humanity to ensure that such a crime is not committed anywhere again," Erdogan concluded, pointing out that the best way to do this is by combating impunity.

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Khadija Genghis: My search for justice for constant beauty is not too late
It is impunity that Khashoggi's fiancé Khadija Genghis also insists she will not accept. In an article marking the first anniversary of her fiancé's murder, she stresses that her search for justice continues.

She says she has traveled the world in search of truth and demanded justice, but so far no single material step has been taken to punish the real culprits, although international media have continued to draw attention to the brutality of Khashoggi's murder.

She stressed that Saudi Arabia is trying to limit responsibility for the killing of Khashoggi to the perpetrators and to withhold the real officials responsible for this crime, that is, those who planned it and ordered it.

Cengiz expressed frustration at the steps taken by the US administration to push Saudi Arabia to achieve justice in the Khashoggi case, condemning the primacy of the interests of pressure groups in the arms, energy and oil industry to enforce justice.

But despite the stalemate, Khadija says it is not too late, and that she will continue to hope that the United States will stand with truth and justice. “Until then, I will continue to seek justice for Khashoggi, and I hope that all the peoples and nations of the world will support me in that.” She put it.

Mohammed Sultan: Khashoggi's ideas continue and have not died
The Egyptian-American activist Mohammed Sultan recalled on this painful occasion how Khashoggi was a personal supporter, and how he helped him find his way in making his contribution in his first discussion in a research center as well as in his first television interviews, and how he encouraged him to forgive his uncle. He was a brigadier general in the Egyptian police who violently broke up a rally in which he was hit before arresting him.

He said he was very fortunate to have benefited from Khashoggi's friendship and guidance in his final year in Washington.

Sultan pointed out that Khashoggi represented an integral element of opposition Arab societies in exile and in the region that had been missing since the failure of the Arab Spring.

He said that Khashoggi was killed not only because of his ideas, which were not appealing to dictators, but also because of his personality.He was very kind, pro-freedom and had a great ability to motivate others.Although he is dead, his ideas continue not dead, according to Sultan.

Karen Attia: Let the world hear the last words of Khashoggi in Arabic
In turn, the newspaper's writer and editor of opinion articles in the newspaper called Karen Attia to enable people to hear the last words of Khashoggi arguing his killers with his Saudi accent, stressing that Jamal, who was discussing about his articles, was very keen to hear the Saudis and read what is written and after them all Readers in the Arab World.

She pointed out in this context to what came in the Turkish newspaper "Sabah" a while ago when it revealed that the last thing Khashoggi said to his killers is "Do not muzzle my mouth, I am asthma, do not do, you will choke me."

Attia said that the Turkish authorities should publish the audio tape of this dialogue, "even as he dies, Jamal deserves to be heard, and his friends and family members and citizens have the right to find an opportunity to know the truth."

Attiyah condemned the US administration's handling of the audio material of the Khashoggi assassination, as Trump and his top officials refused to listen to it on the grounds that it was in Arabic.

In this context, she quoted a professor at Columbia University, Hamid Dabashi, who asked, "How can a person's shout be in Arabic?" To answer that the last words of Khashoggi was not in Arabic, but was a resounding cry of the Arab and Islamic peoples are subjected to humiliation and humiliation by the tyrants who have persevered over the agony.

If Khashoggi was alive to hear the voices of the Arabs protesting in the streets of Sudan and, more recently, in the streets of Egypt, the voices of these people were shouting hope and resistance that the people's power still had a chance to find a way to practice, she said.

Hala Al Dossari: The authorities have turned Saudi Arabia into a fragile and unbalanced country
Saudi activist Hala al-Dosari chose the following headline: "The royal power transformed the state into a fragile and unbalanced country" to comment on the first anniversary of Khashoggi's death, saying that it was not always consistent with his views, but one point they do not disagree about is that absolute power always poses a grave danger. Especially in the case of Saudi Arabia.

She added that she agreed with Khashoggi that the lack of checks and balances in Saudi Arabia is a real problem, exacerbated by the current circumstances in which bin Salman is now controlling the country's resources and political decision, where things are heading towards more repression and destructive interventions continue abroad. Without objection from anyone.

Kerman urges justice to be comprehensive until Yemen enters (Getty Images)



Tawakkol Karman: What we need is justice for Yemen and justice for Khashoggi
These devastating foreign interventions are denounced by Yemeni Nobel Peace Prize laureate Tawakkol Karman, who says in an article marking the first anniversary of the murder of Khashoggi that Saudi Arabia's dispatch of a team that cuts off Khashoggi is the same as it does to Yemen. Forces its ally the Emirates to destroy and dismember it.

She said the world was shocked by what Saudi Arabia had done to Khashoggi, while not surprising the people of Yemen, who are subjected to Saudi crimes, no less terrible and reckless.

She pointed out that the tragic murder of Khashoggi contributed to a global awakening against Saudi violations in the region and the expansion of the anti-war movement in Yemen and abroad.

Kerman concluded by stressing that Saudi Arabia's atrocities in the Middle East are innumerable, stressing that it is true justice that does not exclude any of the victims of this country but includes everyone.