Saturday, October 20, 2018

Evening Edition: ‘The Saudis still aren’t coming clean’: Doubts expressed on explanation of Khashoggi killing

Democracy Dies in Darkness
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
'The Saudis still aren't coming clean': Doubts expressed on explanation of Khashoggi killing
"We do not consent to this being covered up," Turkish ruling party spokesman Omar Celik said of the death of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Saudi authorities said an argument in its consulate in Istanbul led to a fatal brawl in which the Post contributor was killed — an explanation at odds with the conclusions of Turkish investigators.
WorldViews | Analysis
9 key questions Saudi Arabia hasn't answered about Khashoggi's death
The kingdom's account of how the journalist died raises big questions: What happened and why? And how could Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman not have known?
 
Analysis: The world has a question for the White House: When do murders matter?
Russian President Vladimir Putin, arguing the West was quick to punish Moscow after the poisoning of a Russian spy on British soil, said the Trump administration's cautious response in the Khashoggi case underlined U.S. double standards.
 
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In death, Saudi writer's mild calls for reform grew into a defiant shout
Jamal Khashoggi rattled Saudi officials with his restrained appeals for human rights, and his killing has transformed him into a powerful symbol for free expression.
 
Opinions
In a previously unheard interview, Jamal Khashoggi discusses Saudi Arabia and freedom
This past summer, Jamal Khashoggi and Jason Rezaian sat down with Global Opinions editor Karen Attiah for a conversation about the Middle East, Saudi Arabia and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
 
Analysis
For President Trump, it's 2016 all over again
The president is campaigning across the country and talking nonstop. But how much will it help Republicans in November?
 
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Afghans vote in parliamentary elections under threat by Taliban
The eagerly awaited and long-postponed poll — the first held without massive foreign assistance and supervision since the end of Taliban rule in 2001 — was an exercise in chaos, marred by violence.
 
Professor barred from university system for offering course credit to students who protested Kavanaugh
University of Southern Maine students were offered course credit if they joined a bus full of people planning to protest Brett M. Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court and lobby Republican Sen. Susan Collins to vote against it.
 
How to figure out Medicare and choose the right plan
Medicare's open enrollment period began Oct. 15 and ends Dec. 7. The health-care program is complex and can be confusing, so here are tips on wading through the options.
 
 
Retropolis | The Past, Rediscovered
'How could you?' The day Jackie Kennedy became Jackie Onassis
On Oct. 20, 1968, the former first lady stunned her adoring public by marrying a Greek shipping tycoon.
 
Investigators find Iowa youth basketball coach sexually exploited at least 400 boys
Greg Stephen, a respected figure in the youth basketball community in Iowa, allegedly posed online as a teenage girl to coerce boys to send him explicit images and made secret recordings of players showering during team trips, according to a plea agreement filed this week.
 
Yellowstone geyser's eruption tosses up decades of human trash, some 'historic'
After last month's gusher, park workers found a 1930s pacifier, a cinder block, metal signs and other man-made items "strewn across the landscape."
 
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