Turkey has not shared audio recordings said to document the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, its foreign minister said on Friday, dismissing reports it had passed them on to the United States.
Saudi Arabia has denied Turkish allegations that Khashoggi was murdered and his body removed from the consulate after he entered on October 2.
Turkish pro-government newspaper Yeni Safak has published what it said were details from the audio, including that his torturers severed Khashoggi’s fingers during an interrogation and later beheaded and dismembered him.
ABC News, citing a senior Turkish official, reported on Thursday that the recording had been played for US secretary of state Mike Pompeo during his visit to Ankara a day earlier and that he was given a transcript.
Pompeo denied the report, telling reporters: “I’ve heard no tape, I’ve seen no transcript.”
Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told reporters during a trip to Albania: “Turkey has not given a voice recording to Pompeo or any other American official.”
“We will share the results that emerge transparently with the whole world. We have not shared any information at all with any country,” he added.
Turkish police meanwhile are searching a forest on the outskirts of Istanbul and a city near the Sea of Marmara for Khashoggi’s remains, two senior Turkish officials told Reuters on Thursday.
His disappearance and presumed death has caused an international outcry and strained relations between Saudi Arabia and the West.
US treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin and senior ministers from France, Britain and the Netherlands have abandoned plans to attend an October 23-25 investor conference in Riyadh, joining a list of Western business executives and putting the high-profile event in question.