Lebanon blast investigator charges former PM, top public prosecutor
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[January 24, 2023]
By Timour Azhari and Laila Bassam
BEIRUT (Reuters) -The judge probing the 2020 Beirut blast has charged
Lebanon's top public prosecutor, the then-premier and other senior
current and former officials in connection with the devastating
explosion, judicial sources said and court summons show.
Judge Tarek Bitar unexpectedly resumed an inquiry on Monday after it was
paralysed for more than a year by political resistance and legal
complaints filed by top officials he was seeking to question.
The explosion on Aug. 4, 2020 was caused by hundreds of tonnes of
ammonium nitrate that had been stored at the port in poor conditions
since it was unloaded in 2013. So far, no senior official has been held
to account.
Bitar has charged prime minister Hassan Diab and former ministers with
homicide with probable intent, according to court summons seen by
Reuters on Tuesday.
He also charged Prosecutor General Ghassan Oweidat, the head of
Lebanon's domestic intelligence agency Major General Abbas Ibrahim,
former army commander Jean Kahwaji and other current and former security
and judicial officials, court sources said.
It was not immediately clear what they had been charged with, but one
judicial source said Bitar had found Oweidat had not acted responsibly
with regards to the ammonium nitrate.
Reuters could not immediately reach Diab or Oweidat for comment. Ibrahim
declined to comment on reports he had been charged when contacted by
Reuters on Monday. Kahwaji declined to comment.
All those previously charged by Bitar have denied wrongdoing.
Oweidat on Tuesday sent Bitar an official letter saying that Bitar's
probe remained suspended and that no official decision had been taken on
whether he could continue investigating, according to a copy of the
correspondence seen by Reuters.
PUSHBACK
Bitar's previous efforts to interrogate top officials over the explosion
that killed 220 people and shattered parts of Beirut have been hindered
by factions including the heavily armed, Iran-backed Hezbollah.
The group has campaigned against Bitar as he sought to question its
allies and it also accused Washington of meddling in the probe.
Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah repeatedly called for him to be
replaced in 2021.
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Relatives of some of the victims of the
August 2020 Beirut port blast carry their pictures and banners
during a protest outside the Justice Palace, in Beirut, Lebanon
September 7, 2022. REUTERS/Issam Abdallah/File Photo
The investigation was paralysed in early 2022 by the retirement of
judges from a court that must rule on several such complaints
against Bitar before he can continue.
The court has been awaiting the appointment of new judges to resume
its work, a step authorities have not taken.
Bitar met French judges visiting Beirut last week as part of a
French investigation into the explosion, whose victims included two
French nationals. He was unable to share documents with them at the
time because the investigation was frozen.
Bitar resumed work on the basis of a legal interpretation
challenging the reasons for its suspension, the judicial sources
said.
Diab, an academic, became prime minister in January 2020 and
resigned less than a week after the blast.
Bitar's predecessor swiftly charged him and several former officials
with negligence over the chemicals, but that judge was removed in
2021 following political interference in the file.
Diab said in a statement in 2020 that he was confident his hands
were clean and that he had dealt transparently with the file of the
Beirut port explosion.
Bitar has scheduled questioning with 15 people throughout the month
of February, according to judicial sources.
But legal experts and even relatives of victims expect him to
encounter continued pushback.
Nizar Saghieh of watchdog NGO Legal Agenda said officials may try to
dispute the legitimacy of Bitar's resumption, while the judiciary or
security forces could refuse to carry out procedural steps for the
charges to be served.
(Reporting by Laila Bassam and Timour Azhari; Writing by Maya
Gebeily and Tom Perry; Editing by Kevin Liffey, William Maclean)
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