Saudi Arabia declared for first time on 11 September attacks

Lawyers who represent Saudi Arabia claim that prosecutors cannot prove that the Kingdom has supported people associated with Al-Qaeda. Saudi Arabia has asked the US judge to reject 25 charges that are related to the alleged support of this country's September 11, 2001 attacks, [...]
Lawyers who represent Saudi Arabia claim that prosecutors cannot prove that the Kingdom has supported people associated with Al-Qaeda.
Saudi Arabia has called on the US judge to refute 25 charges that are in connection with the alleged support of this country's 11 September 2001 attacks, court documents show.
In a parade near the American District Court in Manhattan, lawyers who represent Saudi Arabia claim that prosecutors cannot prove that the Kingdom has supported people associated with Al-Qaeda, who had kidnapped planes and crashed into the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon, and knocked the butterfly down in Pennsylvania.
Nearly three thousand people were killed in those attacks. Saudi Arabia claims it has deserved sovereign immunity.
James Creindler, the lawyer who represents those killed in the 9/11 attacks, told Reuters that the parachute was unexpected, broadcast newspapers.net.
We have huge amounts of statements about what Saudi organisations have done. Saudi Arabia cannot be erased from the facts”, he said.
Saudi Arabia's lawyers have presented several examples, which they say support their claims. One such claim is the CIA's final report from 2005, in which it claims there is no evidence that Saudi Arabia has backed terrorists.
A long time, however, it is suspected that this country has not attended. It is known that 15 of the 19 kidnappings were citizens of Saudi Arabia, and that some of them have met with Saudis who are related to their government, such as Omar al-Bayoumi, who is related to Saudi diplomats.







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