San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

6 months later, blast victims’ kin still seeks truth

- By Sarah El Deeb Sarah El Deeb is an Associated Press writer.

BEIRUT — Days after a huge explosion ripped through Beirut’s port and disfigured the Lebanese capital, family members of some of the 211 people killed in the blast demanded an internatio­nal probe.

It was a swift vote of no confidence in the authoritie­s’ ability to investigat­e one of the largest nonnuclear explosions in history and one of the nation’s most traumatic experience­s.

The skepticism was justified. Lebanon, a country wrought by political violence and assassinat­ions, has a history of unfinished prosecutio­ns and buried secrets. Six months after the Aug. 4 blast, the domestic investigat­ion has been brought to a virtual halt by the same rivalries that thwarted past attempts to uncover the truth in major crimes.

The investigat­ion into how nearly 3,000 tons of ammonium nitrate, a highly explosive fertilizer component, were stored in Beirut port for years with politician­s’ and security agencies’ knowledge has become mired in a web of murky internatio­nal business interests in the explosives trade and global shipping.

Government officials rebuffed an internatio­nal probe and appointed former military court judge Fadi Sawwan to investigat­e. He has largely focused on government incompeten­ce amid public anger at a corrupt political class blamed for Lebanon’s slide into poverty and upheaval. In a rare move, Sawwan charged two former ministers and the current prime minister with negligence, bringing resistance.

The prime minister refused to appear for questionin­g, calling it “diabolic” to single him out for charges. The ministers challenged the judge and asked Lebanon’s highest court to replace him in a move that brought the probe to a halt since Dec. 17.

In early January, the Court of Cassation ruled that Sawwan can resume his investigat­ion while it reviews calls to replace him, keeping the possibilit­y hanging over the probe. Yet Sawwan hasn’t resumed work, raising concerns among victims’ families that he may have caved to pressure.

Dozens of family members gathered outside his house last week, urging him to restart the probe.

“This should not be like every time,” said Kayan Tleis, whose 40yearoldb­rother was killed in the blast.

In a joint statement, France and the United States said they expect “rapid results” and that the “Lebanese justice system must work transparen­tly, removed from any political interferen­ce.”

 ?? Bilal Hussein / Associated Press ?? Relatives of people killed in the devastatin­g Beirut port explosion on Aug. 4 hold portraits of their lost loved ones during a vigil Thursday outside the entrance to the seaport.
Bilal Hussein / Associated Press Relatives of people killed in the devastatin­g Beirut port explosion on Aug. 4 hold portraits of their lost loved ones during a vigil Thursday outside the entrance to the seaport.

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