Syria opposes UN bid for Beirut queries (AP) Updated: 2005-11-16 09:03
Syria opposes the U.N. request to question six of its officials in Beirut
about the assassination of Lebanon's former prime minister because their
presence could cause friction between the two countries, Syria's U.N. ambassador
said Tuesday.
Fayssal Mekdad, the ambassador, said Syria has offered chief investigator
Detlev Mehlis the chance to interview the Syrians at offices in Cairo, the Golan
Height, Vienna or Geneva.
"We hope that Mr. Mehlis does not rule out all these possibilities, because
at the end of it what's requested is the substance — not the form," he told The
Associated Press.
According to Lebanese officials and media, Mehlis has summoned the six senior
security officials, including Syrian President Bashar Assad's brother-in-law,
Gen. Assef Shawkat, chief of Syria's military intelligence service, for
questioning over the killing of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
A U.N. interim report into the Feb. 14 assassination implicated Syrian and
Lebanese intelligence services and accused Syria of only limited cooperation.
Syrian ambassador to the United Nations
Fayssal Mekdad answers questions from reporters after addressing the
United Nations Security Council at U.N. Headquarters in New York, October
25, 2005. [Reuters] | Syria has repeatedly denied any role in Hariri's killing, but its opponents
in Lebanon accuse Damascus of ordering the slaying because Hariri had
increasingly resisted Syria's control of Lebanon. Syria withdrew its soldiers
from Lebanon in April under intense international pressure, ending a 29-year
presence in its smaller neighbor.
Mekdad said Mehlis requested to interview the Syrian officials — whom he did
not identify — at the U.N. commission's headquarters at the hilltop Monteverde
Hotel east of Beirut.
"Our view is that bringing back our people to Lebanon is really sensitive,
sensitive for our own people and for the Lebanese," Mekdad said.
Mekdad reiterated Syria's "readiness to cooperate" with the investigation of
Hariri's assassination in a bombing in Beirut that killed 20 others.
If Mehlis does not want to "create more complications in Lebanese-Syrian
relations, then we think our offer is a generous one and he should use it,"
Mekdad said.
"If Mr. Mehlis has other ideas, Syria is ready to discuss things flexibly
with him," Mekdad added.
When asked whether Syria was totally ruling out any interviews in Lebanon,
Mekdad did not answer directly, instead reiterating that Damascus does not want
to further complicate its relations with Lebanon.
The U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution on Oct. 31 warning
Syria of possible "further action" if it refuses to cooperate with the U.N.
investigation.
Mehlis' probe has been extended until Dec. 15 and the United States, France
and Britain, which co-sponsored the resolution, pledged to pursue tough measures
if Syria fails to comply.
The resolution requires Syria to detain anyone the U.N. investigators
consider a suspect and let investigators determine the location and conditions
under which the individual would be questioned.
It also would freeze assets and impose a travel ban on anyone identified as a
suspect by the commission, though council members say this provision will not be
implemented until after Mehlis' final report in December.
After the resolution was adopted, Syria announced that it was setting up its
own investigation into the Hariri assassination.
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