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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
UN investigator says Hariri was killed by criminal network
2008-03-29
Former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri was assassinated by a criminal network that is linked to some other terrorist attacks in Lebanon, the chief investigator said Friday. In his first report to the UN Security Council, Daniel Bellemare said the first priority of the investigating commission he heads is to gather more evidence about the "Hariri Network," its scope, the identity of all its participants, their role in other attacks and links with people outside the network.

Bellemare said the commission would not disclose any names to preserve confidentiality. "Names of individuals will only appear in future indictments filed by the prosecutor, when there is sufficient evidence to do so," he said.

Four pro-Syrian Lebanese generals have been under arrest for almost two years for alleged involvement in the murder. Syria denies any involvement in Hariri's assassination, but the furor over the attack forced Syrian troops to withdraw from Lebanon after a 29-year presence.

Bellemare said Syria's cooperation with the commission "continues to be generally satisfactory."

The former Canadian prosecutor said evidence indicates the network existed before his assassination, that it conducted surveillance of the former premier, and that at least part of the network continued to operate after he was killed along with 22 others in a bombing in Beirut on February 14, 2005. "The commission can now confirm, on the basis of available evidence, that a network of individuals acted in concert to carry out the assassination of Rafik Hariri and that this criminal network - the 'Hariri Network' - or parts thereof are linked to some of the other cases within the commission's mandate," Bellemare said.

The Commission has been providing technical assistance to Lebanese authorities in 20 other "terrorist attacks" that have killed 61 people and injured at least 494 others, he said. Eleven attacks have targeted politicians, journalists and security officials and nine involve bombings in public places.

In coming months, Bellemare said, the commission will also focus on identifying links between the Hariri network and the other attacks it is assisting in investigating, and "where these links are found to exist - the nature and scope of these links."

The chief investigator said the commission also has pursued its investigation into the identification of the suicide bomber. Bellemare said forensic information on the bomber's origin, characteristics and movements has been compared to entry-exit records in Lebanon "as well as the missing persons files of various countries to generate leads on the possible identity of the bomber."

"Based on these leads, DNA profiling is being conducted to further assist the identification," he said.

In previous reports, former chief investigator Serge Brammertz said the suspected suicide bomber did not spend his youth in Lebanon but spent his last two or three months in the country. To determine the man's origins, the commission collected 112 soil and water samples from 28 locations in Syria and Lebanon, and 26 samples from locations in other countries which were not identified.

Based on preliminary results, Brammertz said, the commission's experts believe the man was probably between 20 and 25 years old, with short dark hair, and lived in an urban environment for the first 10 years of his life and in a rural environment during the last 10 years of his life.

The commission also established "a limited number of countries where the suicide bomber could come from," Brammertz said. In his final appearance before the council in December, Brammertz said he is more confident than ever that those allegedly involved in the Hariri assassination will be brought before an international tribunal to face justice.

UN legal chief Nicolas Michel said Thursday the tribunal has received enough funding to keep it running for a year, meeting a key criterion for its final approval.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon International Tribunal will be setup in February 2008
2007-12-20
The United Nations Security Council and Netherlands are expected to sign this Friday the agreement that establishes Holland as the headquarters for the international Tribunal . The Security council has also already secured the financing for the initial phase of the tribunal and is expected to be able to pick the judges soon . U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Zalmay Khalilzad told the Lebanese daily Al Hayat that he expects the International tribunal to be set up by February 2008.

Khalizad was told by U.N. top legal adviser Nicolas Michel that the funds required to initially setup the tribunal have already been secured to enable the court to be setup in February.

The Purpose of the International Tribunal is to try the killers of Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and other Lebanese leaders that were assassinated since. Hariri was assassinated on February 14, 2005 and several other anti-Syrian were assassinated since. The last assassinated leader is army General Francoise Hajj. According to Serge Brammertz , UN Chief investigator the investigation revealed that the crimes were connected. Syria was blamed for the assassinations but it denied any involvement.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hariri Assassination Tribunal advances in U.N.
2007-10-13
The United Nations' secretary-general Ban Ki-moon is spearheading plans for a special tribunal to prosecute the suspected killers of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri in 2005.
Ms. Carla del Ponte to the white courtesy phone ...
A selection panel has been appointed to recommend to Ban the names of four Lebanese judges and seven international judges who should serve on the tribunal, as well as its chief prosecutor, the UN said in a statement.

Ban has sent a letter to the Security Council president informing him of his intention to appoint Judge Mohamed Amin El Mahdi, Judge Erik Mose and Nicolas Michel to the selection panel. Judge El Mahdi formerly served on the UN International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and Judge Mose currently serves as a presiding judge with the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). Michel is the UN legal counsel and under-secretary-general for legal affairs.

The UN said that Ban was committed to setting up the tribunal in a timely manner and continued to believe the court “will contribute to ending impunity in Lebanon for the crimes under its jurisdiction.”

Hariri was killed with 22 others in a massive car bombing in downtown Beirut in February 2005. It was widely believed that the Syrian government was linked to the killing.

Once it is formally established, the tribunal will determine whether other political killings in Lebanon since October 2004 were connected to the assassination of Hariri and could also be dealt with by the tribunal.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
US eyes setting up Lebanon tribunal
2007-05-09
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Washington might seek to force the setting up of a tribunal in the murder of a Lebanese former premier. The tribunal will be set up under a chapter of the UN Charter which makes Security Council decisions mandatory. "Absolutely. If we have to, we would push for setting up the tribunal under Chapter 7 because it is extremely important that the court is set up so that Lebanon goes back to normal," Rice told Al Arabiya television in remarks aired on Monday.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon sent special legal counsel Nicolas Michel to Beirut last month to seek a way out of a domestic impasse over the tribunal, but without success. Diplomats have said that Western powers believe Lebanon's feuding politicians are unlikely to agree any time soon to endorse the tribunal and that U.N. action is needed; but some other council members, including Russia, disagree.

Central to the dispute is Lebanon's relationship with neighbouring Syria, which some Lebanese officials blame for the killing of Rafik al-Hariri, a close ally of Damascus turned foe. Most opposition leaders are close to Damascus, which denies any role in the bombing. The world body had hoped Lebanon would agree on a law establishing the court after it asked the council to approve the tribunal and investigate the killing of Hariri and 22 others in a bombing in Beirut on February 14, 2005. "Setting up the tribunal should take place despite the dead end it reached in Lebanon because the killers of Premier Hariri should face justice," Rice said in remarks dubbed in Arabic.

The tribunal is a key issue of disagreement between the U.S.-backed government of Fouad Siniora and its political opponents. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has refused to call a session of the house to ratify the tribunal. "The democratically elected government of Siniora should be supported. Lebanon and the Lebanese people can count on the United States," said Rice. "I would like to say to all in a very direct fashion that the democracy and sovereignty of Lebanon are critical issues for the United State and that we see them as some of our most prominent interests."

Many opposition politicians question U.S. backing to Lebanon especially after Washington's support to Israel in its war with Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah group last year. Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah rejected creation of an international tribunal into the assassination of ex-Premier Rafik Hariri under Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter and said Hizbullah was not willing to give up its "defensive" weapons. "We say no to the establishment of a tribunal under chapter seven," Nasrallah told an Iranian television channel on Sunday.

The U.N. has already signed a deal with Prime Minister Fouad Saniora's government to set up a special court to try suspects in the Hariri killing, but the Hizbullah-led opposition has been blocking its ratification, saying the U.N. would use it for political ends. The Security Council has the power to impose the court on Lebanon if the deadlock continues, under chapter seven of the U.N. charter.

About 1,200 Lebanese and 158 Israelis were killed in the war in which Israeli air, land and sea bombardment destroyed wide areas of south Lebanon and large sectors of the capital. Hezbollah rockets also inflicted material damage in several parts of northern Israel.

Opposition politicians had said they would not discuss the tribunal until the government was reconstituted to give them the blocking minority they have so far lacked, he said. Some Security Council members oppose the use of Chapter 7 to impose a tribunal, a move Hezbollah, also a political party, has said could plunge the country into strife.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Michel presents report on Hariri court to UN chief
2007-05-01
The UN Undersecretary General for Legal Affairs Nicolas Michel presented his "oral" report Monday to UN chief Ban Ki-moon on the international tribunal to try those behind the killing of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and others. Michel conveyed to Ban his conclusions on the controversial issue of the tribunal after his travels to Lebanon over the past month, and it is expected Ban will pass on the conclusion to the UN Security Council some time this week. "It has not yet been scheduled when Ban will discuss Michel's report with the council," said the spokesperson.

Diplomatic sources quoted by the Central News agency said Ban would recommend that the UN Security Council not take any decision before the end of May, giving the Lebanese leaders another month to reach an agreement on the court issue.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria threatens UN if observers deployed along Lebanese border
2007-04-24
Syria has reiterated its warning against the possibility of deploying U.N. observers along its border with Lebanon, saying such a move would sabotage Lebanese-Syrian relations.

The threat came as U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon started a delicate mission to Syria for talks with President Bashar Assad on the planned international tribunal to try suspects in the 2005 assassination of former Premier Rafik Hariri and related crimes.

The daily As Safir on Tuesday, citing Lebanese officials who visited Damascus on the eve of Ban's trip, said the Syrian leadership has cautioned against "stationing civilian or military U.N. observers along the Syrian border because this would certainly lead to measures (to be taken) by Syria that will not be in the interest of either country or people."

"If there is a desire to improve (Lebanon-Syrian) relations …. this should take place by mutual consent," one source told As Safir.

The source quoted the Syrian leadership as saying that no world power "would then be able to force Syria to establish brotherly relations with Lebanon when a political war is being launched against it by some forces in the Lebanese ruling majority."

Damascus also opposes the planned deployment of U.N. observers on the Lebanon-Syria border to prevent the movement of arms to Hizbullah which last summer fought a 34-day with Israel.
Assad to the US: "Send more Congressional delegations!"
Syrian daily Al Watan said that "if the goal ... is to convince Syria to accept the international tribunal and deployment of the international force, the results could be the same as those of U.N. legal adviser Nicolas Michel to Beirut."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hezbollah: Cabinet Tribunal session is a 'Thunderbolt'
2007-02-09
Hezbollah MP Mohammed Raad has warned that a cabinet session to be held by Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's government Thursday which is expected to ratify the tribunal of the murder of Hariri, Lebanon's former PM was a "thunderbolt."


"The ruling team persists with its schemes," Raad told reporters on Wednesday after a meeting between Hezbollah legislators and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri.

"This team's determination on holding so-called cabinet sessions is a thunderbolt that blasts the crisis and collapses salvation efforts trying to find a political solution to the crisis," Raad added.

An Opposition source also described as "serious escalation" Thursday's cabinet session.

The daily An Nahar quoted the source as saying the upcoming session was a "serious escalation which could drag the country into more crises."

Hezbollah also issued a statement attacking Siniora for sending what it said two letters to the United Nations on the issue of the international tribunal.

The statement said the ultimate motive behind the letters was to "torpedo Parliament's role and contribute to the serial agitation against the parliament speaker."

Last week, Siniora sent a signed copy of the agreement for creating the court to the United Nations. U.N. Undersecretary-General for Legal Affairs Nicolas Michel signed the agreement in New York on Tuesday and returned it to Lebanon for ratification.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
UN creates tribunal on Lebanon political killings
2007-02-08
The UN legal counsel on Tuesday signed an agreement to create a special tribunal that would try suspects in the 2005 murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri and other anti-Syrian figures. But the legal document, a step towards establishing the court, does not come into force until it is ratified by the Lebanese parliament, which has not been called into session because of the refusal of its speaker to do so. The tribunal has become a contentious issue between the anti-Syrian government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, which wants the court, and pro-Syrian factions that include President Emile Lahoud, parliamentary speaker Nabih Berri and the Shiite Hezbollah movement, who oppose it. UN. chief legal counsel Nicolas Michel signed the agreement, which has also been approved by an official in Lebanon’s justice ministry. The United Nations is hoping that a solution will be found by Arab diplomats and others, who are attempting to defuse the crisis and break the political logjam.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
UN hands 'final' Hariri tribunal plan to Lebanon
2006-10-24
Lebanon’s government has received a “final” UN text laying out the legal basis for an international court to try suspects in the 2005 killing of former premier Rafiq Hariri, a judicial source said Monday. Nicolas Michel, United Nations under secretary general for legal affairs, handed over the document on Saturday, the source said, and it could be approved by the Security Council “this week”. The text would then need to be approved by the Lebanese government before its adoption in parliament. No official comment was immediately available on the contents of the document.

Lebanese daily L’Orient Le Jour on Monday quoted Prime Minister Fuad Siniora as saying the new text was “the final one” and no longer mentioned “crimes against humanity ... a judicial obstacle feared by certain parties”. Hariri was assassinated on February 14, 2005 in a massive bomb blast on the Beirut seafront that also killed 22 others. A UN probe, which is still underway, has implicated senior officials from Syria, which for decades was the power-broker in its smaller neighbor. Damascus strongly denies any connection with the killing. Beirut said in September that a tribunal proposal submitted at the time needed clarification before a final version was adopted, without saying what issues were outstanding.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
UN's top lawyer sees Hariri court outside Lebanon
2006-03-25
The top U.N. lawyer virtually ruled out on Thursday the idea that a special court to try suspects in the murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri could be located inside Lebanon. "There is a broad perception that for the tribunal to effectively perform what is expected, it is extremely difficult that it would be located on the territory of Lebanon," said U.N. Legal Counsel Nicolas Michel. A number of factors would be taken into account in deciding the court's location, he said, including "security of the judges, of the witnesses, of the accused and the perceived impartiality of the tribunal."
Yeah, we'd probably lose count of the number of exploding cars within a week...
Michel spoke to reporters after briefing the Security Council on the state of planning for the new tribunal. The 15-nation council may vote next Wednesday on a resolution authorizing U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan to begin formal negotiations with Beirut on establishment of the court, Argentine Ambassador Cesar Mayoral, the council president for March, told Reuters.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon: International Hariri Tribunal Up And Running By June
2006-03-09
An internatonal tribunal based either in Vienna or Geneva will be created by June to try suspects in the assassination of former Lebanese premier Rafki Hariri, a Saudi newspaper said Tuesday. The daily ash-Sharq al-Aswat cited unidentified sources close to a United Nations commission of inquiry into the Hariri case. The tribunal would cost an estimated 100 million dollars to operate and would be presided by a judge from one of three countries - Belgium, Britain or Switzerland - while the deputy head will be Lebanese, the report said. According to the Saudi daily, UN officials will name the members of the tribunal in agreement with the Lebanese authorities. UN secretary general Kofi Annan's legal affairs counselor, Nicolas Michel, is expected to visit Beirut to try to finalise the issue in the next few weeks, it said citing the sources.

In another report on Tuesday, Beirut's Daily Star, questioned whether the 100 million dollars mentioned were enough to cover the tribunal's expenses. One way travelling costs for each witness alone would amount to 3,000 dollars, the Daily Star said, estimating that many such trips are envisaged. The UN is trying to convince the EU and specifically France, Britain and Germany to foot the bill, the Lebanese newspaper said. Last Friday, two Lebanese judges, Ralph Riyashi and Shukri Sader travelled to New York for talks with Michel at the UN's headquarters in connection with the setting up of the tribunal while the UN commission head Serge Brammertz is expected to visit Damascus to arrange the questioning of some Syrian security officials implicated in Hariri's killing.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
UN official holds talks on Hariri tribunal
2006-01-28
UN Undersecretary General for Legal Affairs Nicolas Michel said he "had fruitful consultations" with Lebanon's top officials on Friday, adding that he is "determined to inform [UN Secretary General Kofi] Annan immediately of their results." Michel, who arrived in Beirut Thursday, met Friday with President Emile Lahoud, Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, Speaker Nabih Berri, Justice Minister Charles Rizk and Foreign Minister Fawzi Salloukh to discuss the nature of the court that would try those accused of killing former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

According to a presidential statement issued Friday, Michel briefed Lahoud on the nature of his mission in Lebanon, saying he was assigned by Annan to confer with Lebanese officials on the nature of the court. After his meeting with Siniora, Michel, who was accompanied by a UN delegation, said: "The conversations today were especially rich and will help us steer our work in the next few days; but we have to say that our Lebanese friends will have to help us in steering this thinking in the next few days." He added: "I am determined to tell Annan immediately of the results of my consultations, and after that we will continue to think in all directions."

Michel also said that he will respect the secrecy of the meetings and discussions. "All I can tell you is that the consultations will not be successful unless the Lebanese people - and not only its officials - consider that this consensus, [about the form of the court], relates to them," the UN official said.
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