Gulf Today

Victims’ relatives rally for judge in Beirut blast probe

Lawmaker urges justice minister to ‘find solutions’ so that the investigat­ion can proceed, describing the situation as ‘judicial and legal hysteria’

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Families of the victims of the deadly 2020 Beirut port explosion rallied on Thursday to support the judge who has resumed work on the politicall­y-charged case in a daring challenge to Lebanon’s entrenched ruling elite.

Experts have warned that the batle between investigat­ive judge Tarek Bitar and top prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat, who has charged him with insubordin­ation, will be a critical test for the faltering justice system of the crisis-hit Mediterran­ean nation.

Bitar this week defied Lebanon’s ruling class to charge several powerful figures -- including Oueidat, the prosecutor general -- in connection to the blast, and revived a probe that was suspended for over a year amid vehement political and legal pushback.

Oueidat in turn charged Bitar for insubordin­ation and for “usurping power,” ordered the release of all those detained in the case, and slapped a travel ban on them and the judge.

Bitar was called for questionin­g on Thursday, a summons he did not atend.

Security was tight at the palace of justice in

Beirut, where dozens of family members of the victims gathered “to support the investigat­ion” led by Bitar, some carrying posters of those who died.

“We had faith in justice, but the mask has now fallen,” said protester Abdo Mata, 54, who lost his son in the explosion.

“We will never stop, we want to know who killed our children.”

Lawmaker Melhem Khalaf, who represents 1,400 people affected by the blast, said he will meet on Thursday the justice minister and the chief of the Supreme Judicial Council, which is set to convene later in the day.

Khalaf called on the justice minister to “find solutions” so that the probe can proceed, describing the situation as “judicial and legal hysteria.”

Bitar was forced to suspend his probe for 13 months ater a barrage of lawsuits, mainly from politician­s he had summoned on charges of negligence.

Lebanon has a history of political assassinat­ions, and authoritie­s are now “entirely responsibl­e for the judge’s safety,” the families warned, referring to the move against him as a “coup d’etat.”

A defiant Bitar said Wednesday he will not step down from this case, adding that the chief prosecutor “has no authority” to intervene.

The judicial arm-wrestling between Bitar and Oueidat risks deepening Lebanon’s mounting woes, and some warn it may be the last nail in the coffin of a notoriousl­y politicise­d justice system.

“The future of this case is fraught with danger,” said legal expert Paul Morcos.

The complex case is subject to “immense political pressure that Lebanon’s justice system cannot surmount, creating this huge rit,” he added.

The Hizbollah has repeatedly called for Bitar’s dismissal, and this week expressed support for Oueidat.

Hizbollah lawmaker Ibrahim Al Moussawi described Oueidat’s decision as “a step in the right direction to restore confidence in judges and the judiciary ater it was destroyed by some of its members.”

But Samy Gemayel, a lawmaker opposed to Hizbollah, warned the judicial batle “could lead to the total collapse of the justice system,” and called on citizens to defend Lebanon against “a mafia and an armed militia.”

Among those ordered released by Oueidat were dual American-lebanese citizen Ziad Al Ouf, who his lawyer Sakher Al Hashem said had already “arrived in the United States, and will not return to Lebanon.”

A judicial official said that the United States had lobbied for his release.

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

“The Lebanese authoritie­s have repeatedly obstructed the domestic investigat­ion into the explosion,” the joint statement said.

One of history’s biggest non-nuclear explosions, the Aug.4, 2020 blast destroyed much of Beirut’s port and surroundin­g areas, killing more than 215 people and injuring over 6,500.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
A relative of a blast victim tries to climb the gate of the palace of justice in Beirut on Thursday.
Agence France-presse ↑ A relative of a blast victim tries to climb the gate of the palace of justice in Beirut on Thursday.

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