The National - News

UN experts call for credible investigat­ion into murder of Hezbollah critic Lokman Slim

- SUNNIVA ROSE Beirut

Three UN human rights experts are calling for Lebanon to ensure a “credible and effective investigat­ion” into the assassinat­ion of Hezbollah critic Lokman Slim.

They criticised the local judiciary for its lack of results in the six weeks since Slim’s death.

“The government should urgently implement measures to guarantee the independen­ce and the impartiali­ty of the investigat­ion and ensure that those responsibl­e are identified and held accountabl­e,” the UN special rapporteur­s said.

The three experts are: Agnes Callamard, special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial, summary or arbitrary executions; Diego Garcia-Sayan, special rapporteur on the independen­ce of judges and lawyers; and Irene Khan, special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression.

UN special rapporteur­s are high-profile, independen­t experts who can choose to investigat­e situations submitted to them on an individual basis or through NGOs.

Their findings are not a substitute for accountabi­lity, but they shine a light on human rights breaches, said Habib Nassar, a Lebanese lawyer and director at human rights organisati­on Impunity Watch.

“At this stage, it’s essential to bring internatio­nal attention to Slim’s horrific assassinat­ion and pressure the Lebanese authoritie­s,” Mr Nassar told The National.

Slim, a prominent writer, researcher and filmmaker, received death threats for years, most of them linked to his criticism of the Iran-backed Hezbollah movement.

Late in 2019, he wrote in an open letter that the group and its local ally, the Amal Movement, should be held responsibl­e if he died.

The body of Slim, 59, was found in a rental car with six bullet wounds in the back of his head and in his back, near the southern Lebanese town of Saida.

The area is “de facto controlled by Hezbollah”, the three UN special rapporteur­s wrote.

A Lebanese judicial source told The National this week that 20 people had been summoned for questionin­g so far but no arrest warrants had been issued.

Slim’s widow Monika Borgmann, who holds German and Lebanese nationalit­y, called the UN statement a “small victory”.

“This is a first step,” Ms Borgmann said.

She has repeatedly said she does not trust the Lebanese police to solve her husband’s murder and has called for an internatio­nal investigat­ion.

The Lebanese judiciary, which is widely considered to be corrupt, has a track record of not solving political murders.

The three UN special rapporteur­s on Monday called on the Lebanese government to establish an “independen­t and impartial commission to investigat­e the failure of past investigat­ions into the killings of human rights defenders, activists and politician­s”.

The government should also consider requesting internatio­nal assistance to investigat­e Slim’s killing and appoint internatio­nal experts to advise and support inquests into politicall­y motivated murders, they said.

Human Rights Watch Lebanon researcher Aya Majzoub called these recommenda­tions “innovative”.

Ms Majzoub wrote on Twitter on Monday evening that they had the “potential to help combat the prevailing culture of impunity in Lebanon”.

The German ambassador to Lebanon, Andreas Kindl, offered his country’s assistance in investigat­ing Slim’s death to President Michel Aoun and Maj Gen Imad Othman, who leads the Lebanese Internal Security Forces.

 ?? AFP ?? People gather to commemorat­e Lebanese activist and intellectu­al Lokman Slim, who was shot dead in February
AFP People gather to commemorat­e Lebanese activist and intellectu­al Lokman Slim, who was shot dead in February

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