This blog of the Lebanese Center for Human Rights (CLDH) aims at granting the public opinion access to all information related to the Special Tribunal for Lebanon : daily press review in english, french and arabic ; UN documents, etc...

Ce blog du
Centre Libanais des droits humains (CLDH) a pour objectif de rendre accessible à l'opinion publique toute l'information relative au Tribunal Spécial pour le Liban : revue de presse quotidienne en anglais, francais et arabe ; documents onusiens ; rapports, etc...
.

PRESS REVIEW

August 24, 2010 - Daily Star - Nasrallah speech expected to tackle STL, false witnesses

BEIRUT: The content and tone of Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah’s speech scheduled for Tuesday remained a mystery on Monday.


It was still unknown whether Nasrallah would tackle the issue of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) probing the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and add to evidence he revealed on August 3 pointing at Israel’s possible involvement in the crime.


Sources close to Hizbullah told the Central News Agency (CNA) that Tuesday’s address is expected to tackle the government’s decision to follow up on the issue of false witnesses. In its latest session, the Cabinet asked Justice Minister Ibrahim Najjar to investigate the issue.


Nasrallah will also speak on Thursday and on the International Al-Quds Day, which falls on the last Friday of Ramadan.


The sources told the CNA that Nasrallah’s speech to mark the latter will focus on “heavy” political issues.


A well-informed judicial source told The Daily Star on Sunday that evidence provided by Hizbullah regarding Hariri’s assassination would delay an impending indictment by the UN-backed tribunal investigating the murder.


During a news conference Nasrallah screened video clips of alleged Israeli drone surveillance footage intercepted by Hizbullah that showed routes Hariri used to frequent, including the area where he was killed on February 14, 2005.


Nasrallah also aired the confessions of an Israeli agent who said he had been tasked by Israel to convince Hariri’s security personnel that Hizbullah was intending to assassinate Hariri.


Following a request by STL prosecutor Daniel Bellemare for the disclosed evidence, Hizbullah refused to hand over the data directly, saying it had no faith in the Tribunal.


But Hizbullah submitted last week the evidence to State Prosecutor Saeed Mirza, who in turn supplied Bellemare’s office in Beirut with the requested data.



Meanwhile, the parliamentary majority blasted on Monday the campaign against Najjar, saying the minority wanted to pressure the justice minister into issuing a report that ran contrary to his convictions.


As-Safir newspaper on Monday quoted a senior Hizbullah official as saying that “Hizbullah, just like many others, have a lot of question marks after Lebanese Forces Minister Ibrahim Najjar was tasked with following up on the issue of false witnesses.”


Also, Hizbullah politburo member Mahmoud Qomati told OTV on Monday that the STL had lost its credibility, adding that his party was no longer interested with its pending indictment.


Also commenting on the issue of the STL, Progressive Socialist Party (PSP) leader MP Walid Jumblatt called for taking “maximum” advantage of the Syrian-Saudi entente in order to prevent civil strife in Lebanon.


In his weekly editorial in PSP’s Al-Anbaa newspaper, Jumblatt said strife in Lebanon could also be avoided by making a clear difference between the STL and the indictment.


He said such a differentiation would safeguard the tribunal against politicization and manipulation.


Former head of General Security Jamil al-Sayyed, who was detained for alleged involvement in Hariri’s assassination said on Monday the murder of the former prime minister had been designed to implicate Syria and ignite Lebanon.


Sayyed was freed in April 2009 after spending nearly four years in jail along with three other generals after the STL ordered their release on the grounds that there was insufficient evidence to indict them for Hariri’s assassination. – The Daily Star

No comments:

Background - خلفية

On 13 December 2005 the Government of the Lebanese Republic requested the UN to establish a tribunal of an international character to try all those who are alleged responsible for the attack of 14 february 2005 that killed the former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri and 22 others. The United Nations and the Lebanese Republic consequently negotiated an agreement on the establishment of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon.

Liens - Links - مواقع ذات صلة

The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, David Schenker , March 30, 2010 . Beirut Spring: The Hariri Tribunal Goes Hunting for Hizballah


Frederic Megret, McGill University, 2008. A special tribunal for Lebanon: the UN Security Council and the emancipation of International Criminal Justice


International Center for Transitional Justice Handbook on the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, April 10, 2008


United Nations
Conférence de presse de Nicolas Michel, 19 Sept 2007
Conférence de presse de Nicolas Michel, 27 Mars 2008


Département d'Etat américain
* 2009 Human Rights report
* 2008 Human Rights report
* 2007 Human Rights report
* 2006 Human Rights report
* 2005 Human Rights report



ICG - International Crisis Group
The Hariri Tribunal: Separate the Political and the Judicial, 19 July, 2007. [Fr]


HCSS - Hague Centre for strategic studies
Hariri, Homicide and the Hague


Human Rights Watch
* Hariri Tribunal can restore faith in law, 11 may 2006
* Letter to Secretary-General Kofi Annan, april 27, 2006


Amnesty International
* STL insufficient without wider action to combat impunity
* Liban : le Tribunal de tous les dangers, mai 2007
* Jeu de mecano


Courrier de l'ACAT - Wadih Al Asmar
Le Tribunal spécial pour le Liban : entre espoir et inquiétude


Georges Corm
La justice penale internationale pour le Liban : bienfait ou malediction?


Nadim Shedadi and Elizabeth Wilmshurt, Chatham House
The Special Tribunal for Lebanon : the UN on Trial?, July 2007


Issam Michael Saliba, Law Library of Congress
International Tribunals, National Crimes and the Hariri Assassination : a novel development in International Criminal Law, June 2007


Mona Yacoubian, Council on Foreign Relations
Linkages between Special UN Tribunal, Lebanon, and Syria, June 1, 2007