In the run-up to the meeting between US President Joe Biden and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the US capital Washington sent a “reminder” to Saudi Arabia: the street opposite the Saudi embassy has been called “Jamal Khashoggi Way” since Wednesday, named after it the journalist murdered on behalf of the crown prince in 2018, according to the US secret services.

The road will serve as a "memorial so that the memory of Khashoggi can never be stifled," said City Council Chairman Phil Mendelson.

The renaming came a day after Biden's trip to Saudi Arabia was announced in mid-July.

Tawakkol Karman, a Yemeni activist and 2011 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, said at the ceremony that the president's upcoming trip means "Biden has abandoned his commitment to defending human rights around the world."

Sarah Leah Whitson, of the Khashoggi-founded human rights organization Democracy for the Arab World Now, said she wanted to remind the people "hiding" behind the doors of the embassy "every day, every hour, every minute" that they are fighting for the "murder of our friend" are responsible.

He had to die because he "dared to oppose the tyranny of Mohammed Bin Salman".

Biden changes course

Before his election, Biden said Saudi Arabia should be treated like a "pariah state" over the Khashoggi assassination.

After he took office, the government released an intelligence report that the crown prince and de facto ruler approved Khashoggi's assassination in 2018.

Riyadh rejects this and assures that the Saudi perpetrators acted on their own.

In view of the global energy crisis caused by the Ukraine war, Biden recently changed his line on the oil-rich state.

death in Istanbul

Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist, was murdered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2, 2018.

He had an appointment there to prepare for the wedding with his fiancée, a Turkish citizen.

According to official information from Turkey and the USA, a 15-man commando from Saudi Arabia was waiting in the representation, murdered him, dismembered his body and made the remains disappear.

It's not the first time the Washington City Council has used street names in international protest.

The Russian embassy is located in Boris Nemtsov Plaza, named after the opposition politician who was killed within sight of the Kremlin in 2015.

Efforts to name the street in front of the Chinese embassy after the Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010, failed due to opposition from Beijing.

Liu died in Chinese custody in 2017.