Topline:
A section of Wilshire Boulevard adjacent to the Saudi consulate was renamed "Jamal Khashoggi Square” in honor of the slain Washington Post columnist and Saudi journalist. Khashoggi was killed five years ago on Oct. 2 on the orders of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, according to a U.S. intelligence report.
Why it matters: Hannah Garry, executive director at UCLA’s Promise Institute for Human Rights, was present at yesterday’s renaming of the section of street from Centinela Avenue to McClellan Drive and called it a form of justice and reparation.
“To this date, there has been nearly complete impunity for the state sanctioned murder,” she said. “This commemoration of the square is an important step forward in attaining some form of justice and reminding us of all of the ongoing transnational repression against journalists and dissidents and those who speak out for democracy and human rights.”
Background: The Los Angeles City Council approved the resolution to rename the section of street in April, but waited for Khashoggi’s fifth death anniversary to hold the renaming ceremony. Councilmember Traci Park spearheaded the effort.
Khashoggi was a prominent Saudi journalist who fled his home country in 2017 when bin Salman rose to power. But he was killed in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey in 2018.