Lebanon Ex-PM Hariri to Attend Verdict Hearing in his Father’s Assassination

Lebanese former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri listens during a cabinet meeting in Beirut September 20, 2004. REUTERS/Jamal Saidi
Lebanese former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri listens during a cabinet meeting in Beirut September 20, 2004. REUTERS/Jamal Saidi
TT

Lebanon Ex-PM Hariri to Attend Verdict Hearing in his Father’s Assassination

Lebanese former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri listens during a cabinet meeting in Beirut September 20, 2004. REUTERS/Jamal Saidi
Lebanese former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri listens during a cabinet meeting in Beirut September 20, 2004. REUTERS/Jamal Saidi

Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri will attend the long-awaited verdict of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon in the case of his father’s Feb. 2005 assassination, Asharq Al-Awsat has learned.

MP Marwan Hamadeh, who has survived an attempted murder in October 2004, and family members of victims of the attack on ex-PM Rafik Hariri’s convoy on Beirut’s seafront will also attend the verdict at The Hague on Aug. 7.

Hamadeh’s presence will be highly significant because the STL determined that his attempted assassination, in addition to two separate attacks on Lebanese politicians George Hawi and Elias el-Murr are legally connected to Hariri’s murder.

The three cases are currently under investigation.

Four suspects are on trial in absentia over Hariri’s murder in a huge suicide bombing. They are Hezbollah members Salim Ayyash, Assad Sabra, Hussein Oneissi and Hassan Habib Merhi.

Asharq Al-Awsat learned that Saad Hariri will not make any statement on the case before the verdict is issued.

The court has heard evidence from more than 300 witnesses and amassed 144,000 pages of evidence.

After the verdict is issued, Hariri “will not resort to vengeance” because he differentiates between those who have committed the crime and the confession that they belong to.

Hariri is keen on preserving civil peace and on consolidating the national partnership.



Iraqi PM Slams Israel’s Complaint over Attacks by Iraqi Iran-Backed Militias

13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)
13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)
TT

Iraqi PM Slams Israel’s Complaint over Attacks by Iraqi Iran-Backed Militias

13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)
13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani has dismissed an Israeli complaint to the UN Security Council about strikes by Iraq's Iran-backed Shiite militias on Israel as a "pretext and argument to attack Iraq" and to "expand the war in the region."

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar had earlier posted on X a letter to the Security Council saying that "Israel has the inherent right to self-defense ... and to take all necessary measures to protect itself and its citizens against the ongoing acts of hostilities by Iranian-backed militias in Iraq."

An umbrella group of Iraqi militias known as the "Islamic Resistance in Iraq" has regularly launched drone strikes on targets in Israel in recent months in support of its Hamas and Hezbollah allies in the ongoing wars in the Middle East.

Saar said some of the militias are part of the pro-Iran Popular Mobilization Forces — a coalition of mostly Shiite armed groups that's technically part of the Iraqi army although it operates in practice largely outside state control — and urged the Iraqi government to "take immediate action to halt and prevent these attacks."

Al-Sudani’s office said in a statement on Tuesday that Iraq has refused to enter into the regional conflict while "seeking to provide relief to the Palestinian and Lebanese people."