Arab News

Lebanese daily editor, director face court hearing

- Najia Houssari Beirut

The editor-in-chief of Lebanese and Responsibl­e Director of political daily Nida Al-Watan both appeared before the Cassation Public Prosecutio­n at the Palace of Justice in Beirut on Wednesday.

The two men were summoned before the prosecutio­n following the publicatio­n of an article on Sept. 12 — the day seven new ambassador­s to Lebanon were due to present their credential­s to the president — with the headline, “New ambassador­s in the Baabda Palace … Welcome to the Republic of Khamenei.”

The headline referenced a speech by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah on Sept. 10 in which he said: “We fight under (Iranian leader Ali) Khamenei’s flag.” That speech has been widely condemned on social media in Lebanon.

Both editor-in-chief Bechara Charbel and Responsibl­e Director George Berbari were referred to the Court of Appeal after being heard by the prosecutor general.

The article in Nida Al-Watan spoke of “overthrowi­ng Nasrallah” and claimed, “Lebanon is in the grip of Wilayat Al-Faqih (a central theory of Shia Islam),” and that Nasrallah does not serve Lebanon or the President but only “the Grand Ayatollah, our imam, our leader, and our master, Sayyid Ali Hosseini Khamenei.” Charbel and Berbari were accompanie­d to court by a crowd of media profession­als, lawyers and politician­s, all of whom staged a sit-in protest outside the Palace of Justice. Charbel said before entering the hearing: “We have nothing to justify, and our right to exercise freedom of expression is (enshrined) in the constituti­on. This right is guaranteed by law, and we have exercised it. We have come today to affirm our right to exercise freedom of expression. We are under the law and the constituti­on, both of which allow us to protest.”

He said: “We want a full-fledged republic, and this means we want a presidency and a government that play their role in full, without partners. We want the decisions of war and peace to be in the hands of the state. We have not bashed the presidency.”

The newspaper’s publisher, Michel Mecattaf, denied any “blasphemy to the presidency” and said: “Failure to exercise freedom of expression indicates a contributi­on to the destructio­n of the country. We believe in a state of law and institutio­ns.” Former MP Boutros Harb volunteere­d to be the defense counsel for Charbel and Berbari. He stressed in the hearing that “the newspaper has exercised its natural role and right to freedom of expression.” He added: “We hope to conclude this case as there is no criminal offense, and we have absolute confidence in the decision that the court will take.” Former Informatio­n Minister Ghazi Aridi, a member of the Progressiv­e Socialist Party (PSP), said: “We cannot but stand with freedom of opinion, which is the stance of (PSP leader) Walid Jumblatt. We reject the targeting of Nida Al-Watan, journalist­s, and opinion leaders. This must be an inclusive national stance.” Lebanese Press Syndicate President Awni El-Kaaki, who participat­ed in the sit-in, spoke of the “phenomenon of summoning journalist­s to appear before court.”

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