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Related: Syria paper says UN report on Hariri's death untrue
UNITED NATIONS, Oct. 20 (Xinhuanet) -- A UN
investigation report released Thursday evening linked Syria with the murder of
former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and called on the Syrian authorities
to cooperate with investigators.
"There is converging evidence pointing at both
Lebanese and Syrian involvement in this terrorist act," said the report,
referring to the Feb. 14 deadly bomb attack in the Lebanese capital of Beirut,
which killed Hariri and 20 others.
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| United Nations International
Independent Investigation Commissioner Detlev Mehlis (L) hands a report
detailing the investigation into the murder of former Lebanese prime
minister Rafik al-Hariri to Secretary-General Kofi Annan at the UN
Headquarters in New York Oct. 20. (Reuters)
| The report was presented to UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan earlier in the day by Detleve Mehlis, the head of
an independent inquiry commission into the murder of Hariri.
According to the report, the assassination was
carried out by "a group with extensive organization and considerable resources
and capabilities" and had been prepared "over the course of several months."
The report, which has been transmitted to members of
the Security Council, said the commission established that "many leads point
directly toward Syrian security officials as being involved with the
assassination."
The report then called on the Syrian government to
cooperate with UN investigators in finding answers to questions over the part of
Syrian security officials in the death of Hariri.
"It is incumbent upon Syria to clarify a considerable
part of the unresolved questions," the report concluded.
The report also accused the Syrian government of
being reluctant to cooperate with the investigative team.
"While the Syrian authorities, after initial
hesitation, have cooperated to a limited degree with the commission, several
interviewees tried to mislead the investigation by giving false or inaccurate
statements," the report noted.
The Syrian government has vehemently denied any
involvement in the murder of Hariri, who had called for the withdrawal of
Syria's troops from Lebanon.
Hariri's death led to renewed calls for the
withdrawal 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.
German prosecutor Mehlis, appointed in May by Annan
to lead the independent inquiry team, carried out intensive investigations in
both Lebanon and Syria. Last month, he named the heads of Lebanese intelligence
and security agencies as suspects.
Mehlis will brief the 15-nation Security Council on
the investigation next Tuesday. Enditem |