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Syria allows UN probe officials
DAMASCUS—Syria agreed on Friday to allow U.N. investigators to question
five officials at the UN offices in Vienna in connection with the
killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, a top
official said.
The Syrian move was designed to avert a showdown between Damascus and
the UN Security Council after sources in Lebanon said chief UN
investigator Detlev Mehlis was close to giving up on Syrian cooperation
over demands from Damascus for a legal deal before allowing the
quizzing.
“The Syrian leadership has agreed to his (Mehlis) compromise proposal on
holding the interviews of the five Syrian persons at the UN headquarters
in Vienna,” Deputy Foreign Ministry Walid al-Moualem told a news
conference.
Moualem said a date for the questioning would be set after contacts with
Mehlis. A UN spokesman in New York confirmed the deal and said Mehlis
has informed UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan of the accord by telephone.
A Security Council resolution on October 31 demanded Syria cooperate
fully with Mehlis or face unspecified further action.
Mehlis then summoned six top Syrian security officials, who according to
Lebanese political sources include President Bashar al-Assad’s
brother-in-law, for questioning in Lebanon — where he has power to
arrest them.
Moualem said Syria has dropped its demands for a legal framework for
cooperation before allowing the questioning after receiving guarantees
on the right of the individuals, who will be accompanied by legal
representatives, and on the respect of Syria’s sovereignty.
“The Syrian leadership’s decision today ... is an important step that
eliminates any excuse for imposing economic sanctions on Syria,” he
said. The official said the individuals, whose names were not released,
would return to Damascus after the interviews, saying Mehlis had no
power to arrest any suspects.
Moualem and the ministry’s legal advisor, Riad al-Daoudi, who was
present at the news conference, said they were aware that Mehlis wanted
to interview only five Syrians, not six.
Moualem reiterated that Syria was not linked to the February 14
assassination of Hariri.
In an interim report last month, Mehlis said he had evidence of Syrian
and Lebanese officials’ involvement in Hariri’s murder in a truck
bombing that also killed 22 others.
Syria denies any role in the killing. Lebanese sources had said the six
included Assad’s brother-in-law Major General Assef Shawkat, head of
military intelligence. The other five according to the sources were:
Major General Bahjat Suleiman, former head of the internal security
branch at the general intelligence department; Lieutenant General Rustom
Ghazali, former Syrian intelligence chief in Lebanon; Lieutenant General
Thafer Youssef; Lieutenant General Abdul-Karim Abbas; and another
officer, Jamea Jamea.
Jamea was an aide of Ghazali while both Youssef and Abbas were receiving
training at a military academy in Beirut at the time of the
assassination. Abbas is an officer in the military security body headed
by Shawkat. The Lebanese sources said Youssef was believed to be a
communications officer. Lebanon has already charged four pro-Syrian
security generals in connection with the assassination on Mehlis’s
recommendation.—Agencies |