http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-hariri22oct22,0,7802583.story?coll=la-home-world
THE WORLD
Bush Urges U.N. Action Against Syria
Final version of a report on a former Lebanese premier's slaying
omits names of four officials suspected. France may propose
sanctions.
By Maggie Farley and Ashraf Khalil
Times Staff Writers
October 22, 2005
UNITED NATIONS — President Bush called on the U.N. Security
Council on Friday to act quickly in response to a report that
senior Syrian and Lebanese officials probably plotted the
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
The U.N. report does not implicate Syrian President Bashar Assad,
but it describes an August 2004 encounter in which he threatened
Hariri, and cites a witness describing meetings among members of
Assad's inner circle in which the assassination was planned over
the course of several months.
"The report strongly suggests that the politically motivated
assassination could not have taken place without Syrian
involvement," Bush said after helping to dedicate a pavilion at
the Ronald W. Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi
Valley.
Calling the report "deeply disturbing," Bush said it "requires
the world to look at it very carefully and respond accordingly."
He said he had asked Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to urge
the Security Council to convene immediately but did not describe
what sort of action he had in mind.
France, with the support of the United States, is preparing a
resolution that may urge sanctions against Syrian leaders
implicated by the report, U.N. diplomats said Friday.
Syrian officials rejected the report as unfair and politically
motivated. In Damascus, Syria's capital, Information Minister
Mahdi Dakhlallah said in a statement that the report
"contradicts the simplest essential conditions and methods of
investigation."
Analysts said Syrians probably would rally around their
government and resist foreign pressure. Opponents of Assad
predicted that the report would be used for political purposes
but added that the government eventually would have to provide
details rather than just a blanket denial.
In Beirut, people largely stayed off the streets and kept their
children home from school, fearing a violent backlash. But angry
protesters gathered at Hariri's grave, chanting, "Let the
Syrians burn in hell!" and demanding the resignation of
pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud.
Many asserted that Lahoud's days in office were numbered.
"He is a stubborn man, but he is isolated," said Adnan Iskander,
a former professor of political science at American University
in Beirut. "I think popular and foreign pressure will force him
out."
The report was delivered to the Security Council on Thursday,
and chief investigator Detlev Mehlis will brief the council
Tuesday. Mehlis' report strongly suggests the involvement of
three senior Syrian officials and a Lebanese security official,
but he deleted their names hours before the report was released.
He denied being pressured by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
or anyone else, saying he dropped the names after learning that
the report would be circulated beyond the Security Council.
Mehlis called the witness' claim credible but said it had not
been corroborated and "it could give the wrong impression" of
guilt.
"None of these changes were influenced by anyone," Mehlis said.
A word-processing tool revealed the changes made to the publicly
released version, showing that key suspects in Hariri's February
killing included Assad's brother Maher; his brother-in-law and
head of Syrian military intelligence, Asef Shawkat; and his
close friend Bahjat Suleyman, along with a Lebanese ally, former
security chief Jamil Sayyed.
Mehlis reported that the Syrian government provided minimal
cooperation. Investigators were not able to question witnesses
privately, so their answers tended to be "uniform." Several
officials, including Foreign Minister Farouk Shareh, tried to
mislead investigators with false statements, the report says.
The Security Council will consider a second report next week
analyzing whether Syria has withdrawn all of its intelligence
and military forces from Lebanon, as demanded by Resolution
1559, adopted in September 2004. If it has not done so, Syria
could face further sanctions.
France will take the lead, as it did with Resolution 1559. The
Bush administration, saying Syria has failed to crack down on
insurgents who use the country as a base for attacking Iraq, has
been trying to isolate Assad and force him to stop what it calls
his meddling in neighboring states.
Britain also supports increasing pressure on Assad. "This report
is very disturbing," British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said
during a visit to Alabama with Rice. "It is further evidence of
the extraordinary view that the Syrian elite have held that the
Lebanon is a kind of fiefdom…. It is an unpleasant story which
the international community will take very seriously indeed."
Syrian state TV ignored the report for much of Friday, showing
cooking and health programs.
"The report will be abused by the U.S. and the international
community," predicted Michel Kilo, a political analyst and
government opponent. However, he said, the report now puts the
burden on Assad's government.
"In a courtroom, you can't just show up and say, 'I swear, I
swear, I swear I am innocent,' " he said. "It's the same thing
here. You can't just say, 'I wasn't involved.' You have to prove
it."
*
Farley reported from the United Nations and Khalil from Cairo.
Times staff writer Edwin Chen in Simi Valley and special
correspondents Rania Abouzeid in Beirut and Jailan Zayan in
Cairo contributed to this report.
===============
The Security Council is the United Nations' most powerful body.
It has "primary responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security." Five powerful countries sit
as "permanent members" along with ten other member states,
elected for two-year terms. Since 1990, the Council has
dramatically increased its activity and it now meets in nearly
continuous session. It dispatches military operations, imposes
economic sanctions, mandates arms inspections, deploys human
rights and election monitors and more. The materials available
here provide analysis and documents about the Council and the
sharp debate about Council reform, as well as information about
the NGO Working Group on the Security Council.
http://www.globalpolicy.org/security/index.htm
Resolution 1559 - Global Policy Forum - UN Security Council
S/RES/1559. ORIGINAL: ENGLISH. RESOLUTION 1559 (2004). Adopted
by the Security
Council at its 5028th meeting, on 2 September 2004. The Security
Council, ...
HTTP://www.globalpolicy.org/security/issues/lebanon/res1559.htm
Bush Urges UN Action Against Syria
Los Angeles Times - 11 hours ago
Final version of a report on a former Lebanese premier's slaying
omits names of four officials suspected. France may propose
sanctions. By Maggie Farley and Ashraf Khalil, Times Staff
Writers. UNITED NATIONS ...
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