Untitled Document
Beirut - A man has claimed on Syrian state TV that he was bribed to
accuse top Syrian officials of the murder of Rafiq Hariri in his testimony to
the United Nations commission into the former Lebanese premier's assassination.
Husam Taher Husam, a former conscript in the Syrian army, alleged in
a 75-minute interview on Sunday night that Saad Hariri, the son of the slain
Hariri, met him several months ago and offered him $1.3m to testify against
top Syrian officials.
The spokesperson for the Syrian inquiry into Hariri's murder, Ibrahim
Daraji, said on Monday that if Husam is the unidentified key witness quoted
in the UN commission's interim report, then the United Nations' case "has
completely collapsed."
Daraji spoke at a press conference in Damascus on Monday at which Husam reiterated
the allegations he had made on Syrian television the night before.
Syria criticised UN report
Husam told the television that UN officials told him what to say when he gave
evidence to the UN commission, in particular that he was "close to"
Brigadier General Assef Shawkat, the chief of Syrian military intelligence and
brother-in-law of Syria's president, who was named in the commission's interim
report last month.
"But I've never seen him in my whole life," Husam said of Shawkat
in the television interview.
It was not possibly to reach Saad Hariri for a response on Monday as he was
travelling in South America. News bulletins on Hariri's own Future TV station
did not refer to Husam's claims. The UN commission rarely responds to media
reports about the investigation.
Husam's allegations came days before five senior Syrian officials were due
to appear before the UN commission in Vienna. The officials, who have not been
named either by the commission or Syria, will be questioned in the UN headquarters
in the Austrian capital as part of an agreement reached after more than two
weeks of negotiations over where and how their evidence would be taken.
In its interim report, the commission implicated the Syrian and Lebanese intelligence
services in the Beirut bombing that killed Hariri and 20 others on February
14. Lebanon welcomed the report, but Syria rejected it as politicised and unfounded
on evidence. Syrian officials have for weeks tried to discredit the UN investigation
as biased against Syria.
Previously, another Syrian, Mohammed Zuhair Siddiq, gave evidence to the commission
but was later discredited. At the commission's recommendation, he was arrested
in France in October and extradited to Lebanon where he is being held as a suspect
in the murder.
Hariri's assassination, which many Lebanese blame on Syria, was the catalyst
for mass anti-Syrian street protests and intensified international pressure
that forced Syria to withdraw its army from Lebanon, ending nearly three decades
of domination.