Gulf Today

French judges ‘denied access’ to blast probe

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BEIRUT: French judges visiting Beirut this week as part of an investigat­ion into a massive port explosion in 2020 were denied access to documents from the Lebanese probe because it remains frozen, a senior Lebanese judicial source said on Thursday.

The Lebanese investigat­ion into the explosion that killed 220 people and shatered Beirut has been frozen for a year, derailed by political resistance from ruling factions and legal challenges against the lead investigat­or Judge Tarek Bitar.

The two French judges were in Beirut as part of an investigat­ion opened by the French prosecutor’s office because there were French nationals among the casualties, including two dead, a French diplomatic source said.

Bitar told the visiting judges he was unable to share informatio­n until he was allowed to resume his inquiry, the source said.

He would be able share informatio­n not governed by secrecy rules once the probe resumed, the Lebanese source added.

Reuters could not reach the judges for comment.

The explosion, one of the most powerful non-nuclear blasts on record, was caused by hundreds of tonnes of ammonium nitrate unloaded at the port in 2013.

Lebanese efforts to investigat­e the explosion have encountere­d strong political pushback.

Bitar has sought to question senior politician­s, including members of Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri’s Amal Movement, Hassan Diab - prime minister at the time of the blast - and top security official Major-general Abbas Ibrahim.

All of them, including former ministers Ali Hassan Khalil and Ghazi Zeaiter, have denied wrongdoing and said Bitar does not have the power to quiz them, arguing they have immunity.

The probe has been in complete limbo since early 2022 due to the retirement of judges from a court that must rule on several complaints against Bitar, submited by officials he has sought to question, before he can continue.

The Hizbollah, several of whose allies are among those Bitar wants to question, has also opposed him.

A top Hizbollah official said in 2021 the group would remove Bitar from the probe, while H9zbollah’s leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said was biased and should be replaced.

The court of cassation removed Bitar’s predecesso­r, Judge Fadi Sawan, in 2021 following high-level political pressure.

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Relatives of blast victims and activists stage a protest near the parliament building in Beirut on Thursday.
Associated Press ↑ Relatives of blast victims and activists stage a protest near the parliament building in Beirut on Thursday.

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