Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Justice Ministry Confirms Receiving Two Syrian Notices against Jumblat, Khashan |
2014-05-23 |
[An Nahar] Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi confirmed on Thursday receiving two Syrian legal notices against Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid WallyJumblat ... ![]() and journalist Fares Khashan. LBCI television reported on Thursday afternoon that Rifi has confirmed receiving the notices from the Criminal Court of the Syrian city of Lattakia. These warrants were issued against Jumblat and Khashan for "undermining the Syrian state's authority." "The Syrian embassy handed the two notices to the Lebanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which then sent them to the Justice Ministry," Rifi said. He also expressed that he was "surprised by these notices." "We were particularly surprised because the amnesty ruling issued by the Syrian regime in 2013 included these accusations," he explained. "I am currently examining these notices," LBCI quoted the Justice Minister as saying. However, a woman is only as old as she admits... the Foreign Ministry denied receiving any of the two warrants, according to the same source. "The PSP also said it had no former idea about these notices," LBCI added. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Sayyed: Syrian Judiciary Has Issued 33 Arrest Warrants in Absentia in False Witnesses Case |
2010-10-05 |
![]() Detlev Mehlis, former head of the U.N. commission investigating ex-PM Rafik Hariri's murder, and his aide Gerhard Lehmann are among the 33 people named by the Syrian warrants, Sayyed's press office noted. Leb's state-run National News Agency reported that the individuals whom arrest warrants have been issued for are: MP Marwan Hamade, ex-minister Charles Rizk; ex-MPs Bassem Sabaa and Elias Atallah; State Prosecutor Saeed Mirza; Judges Elias Eid and Saqr Saqr; Internal Security Forces chief Maj. Gen. Ashraf Rifi; Head of ISF's Intelligence Bureau Col. Wissam al-Hasan; Premier Saad Hariri's advisor Hani Hammoud; Col. Hussam al-Tannoukhi; Lt. Col. Samir Shehadeh; ambassador Johnny Abdou; former Syrian vice president Abdul Halim Khaddam; retired Col. Mohammed Farshoukh; Adnan al-Baba; Khaled Hammoud; journalists Hasan Sabra, Fares Khashan, Nuhad al-Ghaderi (Syrian), Abdul Salam Moussa, Ayman Sharrouf, Omar Harqous, Ahmed Jarallah (Kuwaiti), Zahra Badran, Nadim al-Munla, Hamid al-Gheriafi; former head of the U.N. commission investigating ex-PM Rafik Hariri's murder, Detlev Mehlis, and his aide Gerhard Lehmann; and witnesses Ibrahim Michel Jarjoura, Akram Shakib Murad, Mohammed Zuheir Siddiq and Abdul Baset Bani Audeh. On September 25, the Lebanese daily Ad Diyar reported that the Syrian judiciary was waiting for the appropriate time to send the warrants to its Lebanese counterpart. "If the Lebanese judiciary does not comply with the Syrian demand, then Syria will take the appropriate measures to have Interpol issue arrest warrants for those individuals," the newspaper added. Sayyed has accused international powers of standing behind claims that Hizbullah murdered ex-PM Rafik Hariri. "The game is bigger than (Premier) Saad Hariri. It is related to international schemes, starting from the new Middle East, which used Rafik Hariri's blood to strike Syria," Sayyed said in remarks published Sunday by the Syrian daily al-Watan. "But today, after failure of the plot, they moved to accuse the Resistance That'd be the Hezbullies, natch... seeking a new scheme based on creating a Sunni-Shiite strife to divert attention from the struggle against the Israeli enemy and transfer this conflict to one between Arabs and Mohammedans themselves instead of having Israel as their common enemy. " Sayyed said "some" surrounding Hariri from Leb and "a large portion" from outside the country convinced the prime minister that Syria and its allies in Leb are the ones who killed his father. "This is why he (Hariri) allowed, contributed to, turned a blind eye and supported a political, media, judicial and security structure of his advisers who chose Syrian false witnesses picked from Lebanese prisons, and provided them with temptations, particularly Zuhair Siddiq, Hussam Hussam and others, to accuse Syria and the four Lebanese officers (Sayyed one of them)," said the former detainee who was jailed for nearly four years in Leb for alleged involvement in Hariri's killing. "But soon after our release and the fall of the hypothesis that Syria is behind the killing, they shifted their accusation within a month from Syria to Hizbullah, and this is no coincidence, of course, where police intelligence under Col. Wissam al-Hasan began arresting Israeli spy networks immediately after the release of the four generals in April 2009." Sayyed said the Government of national unity agreed to finance the Special Tribunal for Leb "because we thought we were paying for justice and truth, not for an international tribunal looking for politics." "But we found out four years later that the international law used the money to hit Syria and a portion of Lebanese through the false witnesses," he said. Describing Druze leader Walid Jumblat as "unstable," Sayyed said he has no faith in the Progressive Socialist Party chief. "I don't believe everything Walid Jumblat says, whether he is with us or against us, because he changes his positions from one moment to another," Sayyed said. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Mufti Al-Jozo: 'Does loyalty to Syria mean disloyalty to Lebanon?' | |
2007-06-12 | |
The outspoken Mt. Lebanon Mufti Sheikh Mouhammad Ali Al-Jozo has criticized the Lebanese opposition, led by the pro-Syrian Hezbollah organization , asking "Does loyalty to the Syrian regime mean disloyalty to Lebanon, igniting Lebanon, and destroying its economy?"
Yesterday it was reported that the Syrian intelligence has reportedly ordered its sleeper cells in Lebanon to assassinate 4 prominent Lebanese leaders: MP Saad Hariri, parliament majority leader and son of former PM Rafik Hariri , MP Walid Jumblatt, Druze leader and head of Democratic Gathering parliamentary bloc and PSP chief, MP Marwan Hamadeh, Minister of communications , who miraculously survived an assassination attempt in 2004, for which Syria was blamed , but denied.any role, Fares Khashan- a prominent anti-Syrian journalist. Al-Jozo wondered whether there was a connection between the recent explosions in Lebanon and some of the armed opposition elements, and said that he hoped that the Lebanese opposition would ask the Syrian security apparatuses to halt their belligerent activity against Lebanon. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Syria ordered its Lebanon cells to kill 4 prominent Lebanese | |
2007-06-11 | |
The Syrian intelligence has already ordered its cells in Lebanon to assassinate the following prominent Lebanese leaders:Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was assassinated in 2005 . The UN investigation pointed fingers at Syria for being responsible for his murder but Syria denied any responsibility
D'Alema also told Muallem " we have proofs of your involvement in the murder of Hariri but we did not disclose them yet" . This apparently angered Mouallem who said "We the Syrians have not made any move yet but once we make our move we will not only set Lebanon on fire but the whole region." | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||
Lebanon journalist faces trial for defaming Lahoud | ||
2006-07-04 | ||
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Beirut judge Abdel-Rahim Hammoud said the charges against Fares Khashan were related to an article published in the newspaper Al Mustaqbal (The Future) on Feb. 24, which quoted disparaging remarks about Lahoud made by Johnny Abdou, a former military intelligence chief and ambassador to France. The dailys editor-in-charge, Tawfik Khattab, will also appear before Beiruts Publications Court, Hammoud said in a statement faxed to Reuters. Al Mustaqbal is owned by the family of former Prime Minister Rafik Al Hariri, who was assassinated in a February 2005 bomb blast in Beirut.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Lebanese MPs summoned to Syria |
2006-05-05 |
Lebanon's attorney general has confirmed receiving warrants summoning two prominent Lebanese MPs to appear before a military court in Syria. The MPs are Druze leader Walid Jumblatt and telecoms minister Marwan Hamade. Reports say Mr Jumblatt, a key member of the anti-Syrian camp in Lebanon, is accused by Damascus of "inciting against Syria". A third man, Lebanese journalist Fares Khashan, has also been summoned to appear before a Syrian Military court. Mr Jumblatt is an outspoken critic of Syria. He has recently accused the Syrian government of "taking part in terrorism", and on Thursday offered to help exiled Syrian opposition groups work towards a "democratic and free" Syria. Mr Hamade was the target of a failed assassination attempt in 2004. It is not known who was behind the attack. Mr Khashan is a regular critic in the Lebanese press of the Syrian government and its supporters inside Lebanon. According to the Lebanon's National News Agency, he is currently outside Lebanon. BBC Arabic Service correspondent in Beirut, Nada Abdul Samad, says the warrants issued against the three men are seen as part of the struggle in Lebanon between pro-Syrian and anti-Syrian factions in Lebanon. The killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in a truck bombing on 14 February 2005 prompted huge street protests and the withdrawal of Syrian forces stationed in Lebanon. Damascus denies any involvement in the assassination. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Syria subpoenas Jumblatt, Hamade and Khashan |
2006-04-04 |
![]() "We will present these warrants to the international probe [investigating the murder of former Premier Rafik Hariri] as new threats against Lebanese personalities are already being made," Hamade said. Syria's military judiciary had filed a lawsuit against Jumblatt and "others revealed by the investigation" accusing the defendants of "inciting the U.S. administration to occupy Syria" and of "defaming" Damascus by blaming it for the series of bombings and assassinations in Lebanon last year. Hamade also linked the subpoenas to the international probe into the assassination of former Lebanese Premier Rafik Hariri, hinting they came shortly before an expected meeting between Syrian president Bashar Assad and the head of the probe team Serge Brammertz. "It is worth noting that we received this a few days maybe before the international probe questions top Syrian officials in Damascus," Hamade said. |
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