Gulf Today

Activist’s family seeks UN probe into Beirut port blast

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beirut: The widow of Lebanese intellectu­al Lokman Slim called on Friday for a UN fact-finding mission to determine whether his assassinat­ion and two other murders are linked to the Beirut port explosion.

A activist from a Shiite family, 58-year-old Slim was found shot dead in his car on Feb.4, 2021, a day ater his family reported him missing.

Beirut’s catastroph­ic Aug.4, 2020 port blast killed more than 200 people, injured thousands and ravaged swathes of the capital. Nobody has been held responsibl­e in either case.

Slim’s widow Monika Borgmann urged the UN Human Rights Council “to commit itself” to a “fact-finding mission to support Lebanon and its people in its calls for justice and accountabi­lity.”

Lebanon’s own investigat­ion into the blast “is not advancing and is hampered,” Borgmann said at a ceremony marking the second anniversar­y of Slim’s killing at his home in the southern suburbs of Beirut.

In one of Slim’s last TV appearance­s, he accused the Syrian regime of having links to an ammonium nitrate shipment that caused the blast.

Borgmann urged any UN fact-finding mission to investigat­e Slim’s killing and two other deaths that she said “could be linked to the port explosion.”

She was referring to Munir Abu Rjeili, a retired colonel from the customs administra­tion, and amateur military photograph­er Joe Bejjany, the circumstan­ces of whose December 2020 deaths have also not been clarified.

“The culture of impunity and lack of accountabi­lity has gripped Lebanon for far too long,” Borgmann said.

Slim’s body was found in southern Lebanon — a stronghold of Hizbollah, which is also an ally of Syria’s regime.

Last month, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty Internatio­nal called on the UN Human Rights Council to “urgently pass a resolution to create an impartial fact-finding mission” into the port explosion.

Lebanese authoritie­s have rejected calls for an internatio­nal probe into the catastroph­e, while the domestic investigat­ion has been repeatedly stalled as high-level officials have mounted a slew of political and legal challenges.

An outspoken activist and a researcher passionate about documentin­g the civil war that raged from 1975-1990 in Lebanon, Slim was a divisive figure.

His sway over foreign diplomats in Lebanon oten sparked the ire of Hizbollah and its loyalists.

On Thursday, UN rights experts voiced deep concern at the slow pace of the investigat­ion into Slim’s death, demanding that Beirut ensure accountabi­lity.

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