|
|

|
|
Jamil al-Sayed (L), Raymond Azar
(C) and Ali al-Hage (R) (Xinhua/AFP photo) |
 |
|
File photo of Ali al-Hage (Xinhua) |
UNITED NATIONS, Aug. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- The UN inquiry into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri identified three former heads of Lebanese intelligence and security agencies and a former member of parliament as suspects in the car bombing, UN spokeswoman Marie Okabe said Tuesday.
The Security Council set up the UN International
Independent Investigation Commission (UNIIIC) on April 7 to probe the bomb
attack after an initial UN fact-finding mission found Lebanon's own probe
seriously flawed and declared Syria, with its troop presence, primarily
responsible for the political tension preceding the assassination.
On the orders of UNIIIC head Detlev Mehlis and with
the full cooperation of the Lebanese police, the homes and premises of the
suspects, Brigadier General Raymond Azar, Major General Jameel al-Sayeed and Ali
al-Hajj as well as former member of parliament Nasser Kandil, were searched for
evidence.
With the exception of Kandil, who is in Syria, the
suspects are being interviewed, Okabe told reporters at the regular noon
briefing. He added that a fifth person who was previously declared a suspect,
General Mustafa Hamdan, was also summoned for a second interview.
Hariri's assassination in February led to renewed
calls for thewithdrawal of all Syrian troops and intelligence agents who had
been in Lebanon since the early stages of the country's 1975-1990 civil war.
Syria withdrew its troops from its smaller neighbor in April.
Enditem |