New York, December 16, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
today urged United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan to work to broaden
a U.N. investigation into the murder of former prime minister Rafiq al-Hariri
to include bomb attacks on three Lebanese journalists. The United Nations
Security Council authorized Annan on Thursday to make recommendations
for expanding the Hariri investigation to other attacks on Lebanese civilians.
It unanimously passed a resolution extending by six months the mandate
of the International Independent Investigation Commission into the February
14, 2005 bombing death of Hariri. The resolution also authorized
the Commission to "extend its technical assistance" to Lebanese authorities
for their investigations into attacks on journalists and other political
figures over the past year. It called on Annan to "present recommendations
to expand the mandate of the Commission to include investigations of those
other attacks."
The resolution renewed the mandate of the current investigation and also
followed a request this week by Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora
for either an expansion of the Commission's mandate or the establishment
of a new investigation that would include other attacks. Siniora's call
came after a car bomb on December 12 killed Al-Nahar publisher
and columnist, and member of parliament, Gebran Tueni, in Beirut. Although
the resolution falls short of outright approval for an extended investigation
into other attacks, the Committee to Protect Journalists called it "a
step in the right direction." The resolution marked the first time that
the Security Council had linked the Hariri probe with other murders and
attempted assassinations in Lebanon, including those of at least three
prominent journalists.
"We are hopeful that this resolution will pave the way for expanding the
U.N. inquiry to address other appalling attacks on civilians in recent
months, including those against journalists," said CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper. "We trust that Secretary-General Annan will work quickly with
the Commission to help ensure that these attacks receive the international
scrutiny that they deserve. Doing so will send a powerful message that
the international community will not tolerate such brazen attacks that
jeopardize press freedom and freedom of expression."
Following Tueni's murder CPJ renewed its call for the Security Council
(See CPJ's October
11 letter to the U.N. Security Council) to expand the U.N. investigation
of Hariri's murder to include the unsolved deaths and attacks on journalists.
Since Hariri's assassination and the launch of the U.N. inquiry, Samir
Qassir, a prominent columnist in the daily Al-Nahar was killed
in one car bombing, and a Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation talk show
host May Chidiac was maimed in another. The Lebanese opposition has blamed
the attacks on Syria, which has denied them.

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