Qatar Tribune

Beirut blast relatives questioned by police after protest

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SEVERAL relatives of the victims of the massive 2020 explosion at Beirut’s port have been questioned by police after they were accused of rioting and vandalism during protests over the stalled investigat­ion into the blast.

Thirteen family members answered a police summons on Monday while hundreds more relatives of blast victims, politician­s and activists protested outside Beirut’s police compound, where the questionin­g took place.

Some relatives threw rocks at the Beirut Justice Palace and burned tyres outside the building during last week’s protests, as they decried what they say is police interferen­ce in the blast probe.

The August 4, 2020 explosion killed more than 215 people, injured 6,000 and devastated entire neighbourh­oods of the Lebanese capital after hundreds of tonnes of highly explosive ammonium nitrate, a chemical used in fertiliser­s, detonated in a port warehouse.

It later emerged the chemical had been shipped to Lebanon in 2013 and stored improperly at the warehouse. A handful of senior political and security officials knew of its presence and the threat it posed to the city but failed to take action to remove it.

Judge Tarek Bitar’s investigat­ion into the disaster has been frozen since December 2021 after politician­s he charged in the case filed legal challenges to the probe. No one has been tried or convicted over the blast.

Protesters on Monday condemned the country’s ruling elite. They say the elite’s lock on power has kept its members immune from accountabi­lity.

William Noun, who lost his brother Joe, a firefighte­r, in the blast, has been an outspoken activist.

Summoned Monday, he later claimed the authoritie­s were trying to exhaust and intimidate the families.

Security forces raided his home and detained him overnight on Saturday after he spoke in a TV interview and criticised the judiciary.

“We want justice, and we want everyone who blew up the port to be held accountabl­e, regardless of their political affiliatio­n,” he said as he walked into the compound.

Among the protesters outside was the mother of Ahmad Kaadan, who was killed in the blast. She held a poster of her son and decried what she said was Lebanon’s “failed state and judiciary”.

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