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UN tribunal for Lebanon’s Hariri assassination risks closure over funding

The file photo, taken on December 11, 2020, shows the exterior view of the edifice of the United Nations-backed Lebanon Tribunal in Leidschendam, the Netherlands. (Via AP)

A UN-backed tribunal set up by the Security Council in 2009 to prosecute those responsible for the 2005 assassination of Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri will have to close after July if its acute funding shortage is not resolved.

The so-called Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL), which is funded 51% by voluntary contributions and 49% by the Lebanese government, said in a statement on Wednesday that it had run out of money.

Registrar David Tolbert said the closure would leave “important cases unfinished, to the detriment of victims.”

“The Special Tribunal for Lebanon regrets to announce that it is facing an unprecedented financial crisis. Without immediate funding, the Tribunal will not be able to operate beyond July 2021.”

Created by a 2007 UN Security Council resolution, the tribunal’s 2020 budget was $67 million.

The statement said while the 2021 budget was cut by 37% and a $15.5-million contribution had been received from the UN on behalf of Lebanon in March, other contributions had not materialized.

Court officials have notified UN Secretary General Antonio Gutteres of the situation and judges and other staff are preparing steps to preserve court records and take steps “related to the protection of witnesses,” the statement added.

In August 2020, the STL delivered its final verdict on the assassination. It said it had not been able to establish any link between the explosion in Beirut that killed Hariri and the Hezbollah resistance movement or the Syrian government.

After 15 years of investigation and trial, the tribunal convicted one out of four original suspects of involvement in the assassination and acquitted three others.

Experts believe the STL has been purely political since its inception.

Hezbollah has condemned the tribunal for serving as an opportunity for the Israeli regime to achieve its ‘unachieved’ goals in Lebanon.

In 2010, Hezbollah’s Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah uncovered evidence that shows how Israeli drones had constantly monitored the movements of Hariri, and that it was Israel that had a strong motive to eliminate him.

The trial opened in March 2009. Hariri was killed on February 14, 2005 in a car bombing in Beirut. Explosives put inside a parked vehicle were detonated as Hariri’s motorcade drove by. Twenty-one other people were also killed in the explosion.


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