But since the killing of Saudi national and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, the forum has had a number of high-profile guests withdraw, among them: JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, HSBC CEO John Flint, Blackrock CEO Larry Fink, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde.
— Fahad Nazer فهد ناظر (@fanazer) October 22, 2018
And just one day before the event, it doesn't appear that the organizers have been able to handle the boycott that came so close to its scheduled start date. The "program" tab on the website reads: "The detailed program will be released shortly."
— Alex Rubinstein (@RealAlexRubi) October 22, 2018
The crown prince has used the event in years prior as a platform from which to pitch tech and business leaders on his Vision 2030 plan, which aims to diversify Saudi Arabia's economy to make it less dependent on oil exports.
— Justin Jacobs (@justinjfj) October 22, 2018
Early on Monday morning, the website appeared to have been hacked. "The Saudi regime is one of the sources for #terrorism_financing in the world" a message on the website read. "17+ supported terrorist groups," "40,000+ killed in Yemen," "89,000+ Syrian civilians killed," the message continued.
Below, under the "latest news" section, another message read: "Exposing a thousand terrorists and spies of the Saudi regime who perform malicious activities around the globe. You can download 1000+ leaked spies personal data from link below."
The screenshot detailing that message was published on Twitter by an editor at Bloomberg News and included email addresses which appeared to belong to individuals — possibly government employees — and government organizations in Saudi Arabia.
— Helen Robertson (@HelenCRobertson) October 22, 2018
The most widely-shared edit to the investment forum's website was an image of bin Salman with "ISIS" emblazoned on his clothes, standing alongside two men, one of whom carries an assault rifle and another a Daesh flag. Bin Salman holds a sword above Khashoggi's head as though he's about to, well, hack the journalist to bits.
"For the sake of security for children worldwide, we urge all countries to put sanction on the Saudi regime," a message under that image read, calling the killing of Khashoggi "barbaric," the House of Saud "medieval" and bemoaning the slaughter of "thousands of innocent people in Yemen."
The website was taken offline after the apparent hack and eventually restored.