| Syria angrily rejects U.N. resolution(AP)
 Updated: 2005-11-01 19:21
 
 The resolution came less than two weeks after lead investigator Detlev Mehlis 
released his report concluding it was not likely Hariri could have been killed 
without senior Syrian approval. The report accused Syria of not cooperating 
fully in the probe and Mehlis asked U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan for more 
time to pursue leads. 
 The resolution requires Syria to detain anyone considered a suspect by U.N. 
investigators. 
 Mehlis, whose mandate has been extended to Dec. 15, has also been given new 
authority by the council, and could seek to use it immediately. He is likely to 
seek to question Syrian President Bashar Assad's brother-in-law and chief of 
military intelligence Assef Shawkat, who has been implicated in the killing as 
well as the president's brother Maher Assad, who is also under suspicion. 
 Diplomats said al-Sharaa's reaction underscored Syria's isolation and 
highlighted the necessity for the warning to Damascus. 
 Straw said any council member concerned about adopting the resolution under a 
U.N. charter provision which is militarily enforceable should have their 
misgivings allayed by al-Sharaa's response. 
 "It sends a very strong signal to Syria of its isolation, but of course that 
signal was simply reinforced by the really unbelievable tirade of Syria's 
Foreign Minister, Mr. al-Sharaa," Rice told reporters after the council vote. 
 
 
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