Beirut blast remains shrouded in mystery, families demand truth
Six months since one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history hit Lebanon, victims鈥 families are still searching for answers. Political rivalries have stalled a probe into the blast 鈥 not for the first time in a place where politics has often disrupted the judiciary.聽
Six months since one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history hit Lebanon, victims鈥 families are still searching for answers. Political rivalries have stalled a probe into the blast 鈥 not for the first time in a place where politics has often disrupted the judiciary.聽
Days after a massive explosion ripped through Beirut鈥檚 port and disfigured the Lebanese capital six months ago, family members of some of the 211 people killed in the blast were demanding an international probe.聽
It was a swift vote of no confidence in the authorities鈥 ability to investigate one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history and one of the nation鈥檚 most traumatic experiences.
The skepticism was justified. Lebanon, a country wrought by political violence and assassinations, has a history of unfinished prosecutions and buried secrets.聽
Now, half a year after the Aug. 4 blast, the domestic investigation has been brought to a virtual halt by the same political and confessional rivalries that thwarted past attempts to uncover the truth in major crimes.聽
What started as an investigation into how nearly 3,000 tons of ammonium nitrate, a highly explosive fertilizer component, were stored in Beirut port for years with politicians鈥 and security agencies鈥 knowledge has taken a turn, wading into a web of murky international business interests in the explosives trade and global shipping.
Government officials rebuffed an international probe and appointed former military court judge Fadi Sawwan to investigate. He has largely focused on government incompetence amid public anger at a corrupt political class blamed for Lebanon鈥檚 slide into poverty and upheaval.
In a rare move, Mr. Sawwan charged two former ministers and the current prime minister with negligence, triggering pushback.
The prime minister refused to appear for questioning, calling it 鈥渄iabolic鈥 to single him out for charges. The ministers challenged the judge and asked Lebanon鈥檚 highest court to replace him in a move that brought the probe to a halt since Dec. 17. The interior minister said he won鈥檛 ask security forces to implement arrest warrants targeting political figures.
In early January, the Court of Cassation ruled that Mr. Sawwan can resume his investigation while it reviews calls to replace him, keeping the possibility hanging over the probe.
Yet Mr. Sawwan hasn鈥檛 resumed work, raising concerns among victims鈥 families that he may have caved to pressure.
Dozens of family members gathered outside his house Monday, urging him to restart the probe.
鈥淲e want to know if they are not letting him,鈥 Kayan Tleis, whose brother was killed in the blast, said in reference to politicians. 鈥淭his should not be like every time.鈥
Lebanon鈥檚 sectarian-based political factions have had a lock on power in the country for decades and have divided up posts across the state among themselves. Though rivals, they have a common interest in preventing accountability.
Structural problems undermine the judiciary.
The government and the president name judges, allowing political factions to install loyalists as rewards. Prosecutors stall, preventing cases from reaching courts.
The government also holds enormous sway over the five-member Judicial Council, a special court where it refers security and political crimes. Decisions by the government-appointed judges can鈥檛 be appealed.
Human Rights Watch said Mr. Sawwan鈥檚 appointment process was opaque and the investigation itself, so far secret, has been tainted with political interference. Two judges named by the justice minister before Mr. Sawwan were rejected without an explanation by the government-appointed body in charge of approving the selection.
At least 25 people have been held since August under the investigating judge鈥檚 powers of unlimited pre-trial detention. He only questioned them once, according to HRW. Most are port staff, including the head of the port authority, a security official, and a maintenance engineer, and all face the same litany of charges no matter what their position, said Aya Majzoub, HRW鈥檚 Lebanon researcher.
Senior political faction leaders have publicly questioned the course of Mr. Sawwan鈥檚 investigation or hinted he may be covering up for their rivals.
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah questioned Mr. Sawwan鈥檚 focus on domestic negligence. He urged him to share reports by military, security, and foreign agencies.
鈥淲as there something military in the port that led to this explosion? Why not tell the people the truth?鈥 said Mr. Nasrallah. Hezbollah has denied claims it stored explosives at the port.
A Hezbollah rival, Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, pointed at the Syrian government, suggesting it imported the explosives through Lebanon because its ports were in the line of fire at the height of Syria鈥檚 civil war in 2013.
鈥淭here can鈥檛 be a probe so long as the judiciary is not independent of Syrian guardianship or from [the president鈥檚] people or Syrian allies,鈥 Mr. Jumblatt told Sky News Arabia.
Some described Mr. Sawwan as 鈥渂rave,鈥 even 鈥渟uicidal鈥 for taking the post that could endanger his career or his life.
Throughout Lebanon鈥檚 history, judges have been threatened, intimidated, and even killed. Gunmen sprayed four judges with bullets in court in 1999, killing them on the spot during a murder and drug trafficking trial. In 1977, a judge investigating the killing of a Druze leader was kidnapped in his own car and his house hit with a rocket-propelled grenade.
The 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri brought a rare international investigation. Syria, whose forces occupied Lebanon at the time, was considered the prime suspect. The local investigation was scuttled by accusations of political interference.
World powers, whose pressure forced Syrian troops to withdraw, backed a parallel United Nations fact-finding mission and special tribunal. After a drawn-out, 15-year process, the Special Tribunal in The Hague convicted only one of the four defendants, all Hezbollah operatives, with no explanation of who was ultimately behind the killing, disappointing many.
That tribunal also cost millions of dollars, money that Lebanon 鈥 broke and struggling with a historic economic crisis 鈥 doesn鈥檛 have.
Youssef Diab, a Lebanese journalist who covers the courts, said Lebanon doesn鈥檛 have the resources or technical capacity to handle an investigation of the explosion鈥檚 scope.
鈥淭his is a lot graver than the assassination of Rafik Hariri. A city was destroyed, [211] died, 6,000 wounded, and many people have not yet returned home. This is a major crime,鈥 he said.
FBI and French investigators conducted a forensic probe after the blast, but their findings remain sealed.
Ms. Majzoub, of Human Rights Watch, said a U.N. fact-finding mission is needed.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 rest our hope and faith on a broken system that has proven incredibly resilient. We can鈥檛 expect the very people who are implicated in these crimes and other big crimes in Lebanon to lead reform.鈥
In an investigative report, Lebanese documentary maker Feras Hatoum revealed that the company that bought the ammonium nitrate may have links through shell companies with two Syrian businessmen under United States sanctions for their ties to President Bashar Assad. One of them was sanctioned in 2015 for his suspected role in securing explosives for Mr. Assad鈥檚 forces.
鈥淵ou need authorities to investigate,鈥 Mr. Hatoum told The Associated Press.
Mr. Sawwan has not reached out to him yet, but Youssef Lahoud, a lawyer representing victims鈥 families, said they will include Mr. Hatoum鈥檚 findings in their case. Mr. Lahoud said Mr. Sawwan has only two clerks and two trainee judges helping him.
Former state prosecutor Hatem Madi, who investigated political violence before he retired in 2013, said many reasons could have caused Mr. Sawwan to halt the probe: crossing a red line, receiving threats or pressure, or because he feared the consequences of his findings.
鈥淢ost of the big cases are stopped because of reasons of State,鈥 Mr. Madi said.
This story was reported by The Associated Press.聽