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Execs bailing on Saudi ‘Davos in the Desert’ in Wake of Journalist’s Murder

Saudi Khashoggi

Top business executives, U.S. and European officials and others have distanced themselves from Saudi Arabia over the disappearance and killing of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi, with many canceling their attendance at this week’s investment conference that the kingdom had hoped to use to boost its global image.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin canceled late last week. 

With reports circulating of the writer’s torture and killing in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, executives who have been doing business with Saudi Arabia for years are in damage control mode. What was at first a trickle of cancellations from the Saudi event, due to be held in Riyadh Tuesday through Thursday, later snowballed.

The Future Investment Initiative was set up last year as a kind of “Davos in the Desert” for the world’s business elite to network, though it has no ties to the annual World Economic Forum summit in Davos.

At last year’s inaugural event, Saudi Arabia announced the creation of a whole new city in the desert that would showcase new technologies, such as renewable energies. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has been trying to refocus the Saudi economy away from its traditional reliance on oil by investing in more innovative industries, including big firms like Uber.

The scale of the executives’ cancelations, however, had raised questions whether the event would go ahead — and how that could affect longer-term business relations with Saudi Arabia.

Executives and officials who have canceled their attendance at the event:

Companies that withdrew as media partners to the conference:

Other organizations that have also cut ties with the Saudis in the wake of the Khashoggi case:

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