Aug 10 2012 |
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Lebanese politician acted on Syrian orders
Friday, Aug 10, 2012
Beirut: A day after Michel Samaha was apprehended by Internal Security Forces (ISF), Lebanese media outlets claimed that the former Member of Parliament and Information Minister admitted to involvement in a plot to carry out several bombings throughout the country. Reportedly, Samaha told investigators that the order to spread havoc in Lebanon came from Syrian President Bashar Al Assad in person. According to the MTV television network, however, Samaha acknowledged he “acted on orders from Damascus.”
“This is what Bashar wants,” Al Jumhuriyah paper claimed Samaha told his interrogators. Additional news leaks, attributed to security sources, alleged that Samaha met a high-ranking Syrian official a few days ago in Damascus. These sources said that Ali Mamluk, who was appointed head of Syria’s National Security office on July 24, apparently ordered Samaha to carry out the attacks. Interestingly, one of the unidentified security sources contended that Samaha admitted to transferring between 2 and 20 kilograms of explosives in his car (that receives semi-diplomatic protection) from Damascus to Lebanon through the Masna’ah border crossing, ostensibly to avoid questioning at the frontier. Why Mamluk needed to procure such explosives when they were readily available on the Lebanese market could not be explained, however. In the event, the supposed bombs were to be detonated in the super-sensitive Akkar region to ignite a Sunni-Alawi, or even Sunni-Christian discord. A claim that at least one device was destined for the Maronite Patriarch, Bisharah Al Rahi, who is planning a visit to Akkar on August 13, sent shivers across members of the community. Other bombs were allegedly destined to go off at Ramadan Iftars attended by important Sunni personalities in Tripoli. Samaha’s bodyguard, Ali Mallah, his chauffeur, Faris Barakat, and his secretary Gladys ‘Awadah were all briefly arrested for interrogation, although all three were released on bail by late Thursday. Other individuals may have escaped to Syria though this was pure speculation. MP Mohammad Ra’ad, head of Hizballah’s Loyalty to Resistance parliamentary bloc, described the accusations as “security fabrications.”
“We will not remain silent but we will wait for some time,” Ra’ad declared, further asserting:
By Joseph A. Kechichian Senior Writer
Gulf News 2012. All rights reserved.
© Copyright Zawya. All Rights Reserved.
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