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DAMASCUS, Jan. 3 (Xinhuanet) -- Syrian officials confirmed on
Tuesday that Damascus has received a request by a UN investigation commission to
interview President Bashar al-Assad in the probe into the killing of former
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
Bashali Kanfani, director of the Foreign Media
Department of the Foreign Ministry, told Xinhua over phone that Syria received
the request on Sunday to interview Assad and Foreign Minister Farouk al-Shara
concerning the case.
She declined to give further details, saying that the request
was not submitted to the Foreign Ministry but to the Syrian government.
Namir Ganim, chairman of the Foreign Committee of the Syrian
People's Assembly (parliament), also told Xinhua that legal experts at the
Foreign Ministry were studying the request.
"If they consider that the request does not infringe upon
national sovereignty and dignity, Syria will provide as much cooperation as it
can with the commission," Ganim said.
Former Syrian Vice President Abdel Halim Khaddam, who is living
in Paris, accused in an interview with the Dubai-based al-Arabiya television on
Friday that President Assad had threatened Hariri just months before he was
assassinated in a car bomb blast on Feb. 14.
Khaddam said Syrian intelligence services could not have carried
out such an operation without Assad being informed.
Following the allegation, the UN commission in Beirut sought to
interview Assad, Shara and other senior officials and was waiting for an
answer.
Outgoing chief UN investigator Detlev Mehlis submitted two
interim reports in October and December, accusing Syrian and Lebanese officials
of being involved in the killing of Hariri.
The UN Security Council demanded full Syrian cooperation with
the international probe.
Syria has denied any role in the killing and dismissed the UN
charge of slow cooperation as "inaccurate." Enditem |