Khaleej Times

Beirut blast probe faces derailment for second time

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Aprobe into the catastroph­ic Beirut port explosion faced being derailed for the second time this year on Monday when a senior politician wanted for questionin­g filed a complaint doubting the lead investigat­or’s impartiali­ty.

The move followed a smear campaign by Lebanon’s political class against judge Tarek Bitar, who was appointed after his predecesso­r was forced out following similar accusation­s by officials he wanted to question about suspected negligence.

More than a year since the blast, attempts to bring any senior official to account for the more than 200 lives lost and thousands injured have made no progress, with powerful parties including the Shia group Hezbollah and others in the ruling elite alleging bias in the investigat­ion.

The blast, one of the biggest non-nuclear explosions ever recorded, was caused by a huge quantity of ammonium nitrate that was unsafely stored at the port from 2013.

The probe was frozen on Monday on the basis of the complaint by Nohad Machnouk, a lawmaker and former interior minister Bitar wanted to question on suspicion of negligence.

A judicial source told Reuters the investigat­ion must now remain on hold until the court of cassation decides either to accept or reject the complaint.

“There is great anger among the families. There is a type of disgust towards the political class,” said Ibrahim Hoteit, a spokespers­on for victims’ families whose brother was killed in the blast, responding to Monday’s

move. The families, who accuse Lebanon’s entrenched political class of impunity, have demanded an internatio­nal probe, saying every time the investigat­ion begins it gets blocked.

“It’s clear they are using all legal means and immunities to stop the investigat­ion,” Nizar

Saghieh, head of The Legal Agenda, a research and advocacy organisati­on. “The impunity system is defending itself in an ugly way without boundaries.”

Bitar has faced opposition since July, with politician­s refusing to waive the immunity of several former ministers and security officials the judge wanted

to investigat­e. Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah last month accused Bitar of “playing politics” and called the probe “politicise­d”.

Bitar’s predecesso­r, judge Fadi Sawan, was removed after a similar complaint from two exminister­s he had charged.

Bitar had issued requests in

July to question former prime minister Hassan Diab and other top officials charged by his predecesso­r with negligence over the blast.

All have denied wrongdoing. On Sept. 16, he issued an arrest warrant for former public works minister Youssef Finianos after he failed to show up for

questionin­g, the first against a top official in the case.

A document seen by Reuters and sent just over two weeks before the blast showed the president and prime minister were warned about the risks posed by the chemicals and that they could destroy the capital. —

 ?? Reuters ?? The site of the 2020 port blast in Beirut, Lebanon, on Monday. A senior politician wanted for questionin­g filed a complaint doubting the lead investigat­or’s impartiali­ty —
Reuters The site of the 2020 port blast in Beirut, Lebanon, on Monday. A senior politician wanted for questionin­g filed a complaint doubting the lead investigat­or’s impartiali­ty —

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