By Laila Bassam, Maya Gebeily and Timour Azhari
- Beirut – The judge investigating the 2020 Beirut port explosion has unexpectedly resumed his inquiry and charged top security officials, three judicial officials said on Monday, more than a year after his probe was frozen by political resistance.
Judge Tarek Bitar’s efforts to interrogate top officials over the explosion that killed 245 people and shattered Beirut have been derailed by push-back from factions including the heavily armed, Iran-backed Hezbollah.
Bitar has charged Major General Abbas Ibrahim, head of Lebanon’s domestic intelligence agency, and Major General Tony Saliba, head of another security body, in connection with the blast, the officials said, without specifying the charges.
He also charged former army commander Jean Kahwaji.
Ibrahim who was the first to reveal on Aug 4, 2020 immediately following the explosion that the chemicals stored inside the port caused the explosion , commented to Al Jadeed by saying:
“the charges made by Judge Tarik Bitar do not warrant comment, and I will not talk about appearing before the judiciary before the summons.”
Saliba and Kahwaji could not immediately be reached for comment.
All have denied wrongdoing.
The Aug. 4, 2020 explosion was caused by hundreds of tonnes of ammonium nitrate unloaded at the port in 2013. No senior official has been held to account.
Victims’ relatives welcomed the resumption of the inquiry.
“It was a beautiful shock but we want to be sure that no one stands in his way,” said William Noun, who lost his brother in the explosion.
Judicial sources said Bitar had ordered the release of five people detained since shortly after the blast — former port officials Michel Nahoul, Shafiq Merhi and Sami Hussein; a welder of Syrian origin, Ahmad Rajab; and a contractor, Salim Shebli.
Bitar met French judges visiting Beirut last week as part of a French investigation into the explosion that killed two French nationals. He was unable to share documents with them because the investigation was frozen.
Politicians that Bitar had sought to question, including Hezbollah allies, made dozens of legal challenges disputing his right to interrogate them and saying he had overstepped his powers.
The investigation was paralysed in early 2022 by the retirement of judges from a court that must rule on several such complaints against Bitar before he can continue.
The court has been awaiting the appointment of new judges to resume its work – a step authorities have not taken.
Bitar resumed his work on the basis of a legal interpretation challenging the reasons for its suspension, the judicial sources said.
ANALYST SEES NEW TENSIONS
Hezbollah has campaigned against Bitar as he sought to question its allies and accused Washington of meddling in the probe. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah called for him to be replaced.
Top Hezbollah official Hussein Khalil said he did not want to comment on the latest development but reiterated Hezbollah’s stance that the investigation had been marred by “black points”.
An anti-Bitar protest called by Hezbollah and its allies in October 2021 escalated into deadly violence.
The investigation’s resumption “will certainly raise tensions in the country because the factions who were opposed to his moves will raise hell – they will object again”, said Nabil Boumonsef, deputy editor-in-chief of Annahar newspaper.
Senior politicians Bitar sought to interrogate included members of Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri’s Amal Movement, an important Hezbollah ally, along with Hassan Diab – prime minister at the time of the blast.
All of them, including former ministers Ali Hassan Khalil and Ghazi Zeaiter, have denied wrongdoing, and some say they have immunity from prosecution.
The Lebanese judiciary, where appointments depend largely on political backing, has long been prone to political influence.
A court removed the first judge appointed to investigate the blast – Fadi Sawan – after he charged three ex-ministers and Diab with negligence.
In November, Lebanon’s most senior judge said political meddling in judicial work had led to a chaotic situation that required a “revolution in approaches” to resolve.
(Reuters)
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