Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri admitted that he had erred in accusing Syria of assassinating his father after five years of rupturing ties with the neighboring country.
Hariri told the Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat newspaper in remarks published on Monday that the charge had been politically motivated and that when he assessed this mistake, he found that it had harmed the Syrian people and the ties between the two countries.
“One has to assess (events) in previous years so that past mistakes are not repeated,” Hariri said in his first clear confession to date of his earlier accusations against Syria.
Five years after the assassination, when the Saudi-Syrian ties went back to normal, Syria welcomed Hariri after he became prime minister.
Hariri told Asharq al-Awsat that he feels he is going to a friendly country when he travels to Damascus.
The investigation, by the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, into Hariri’s assassination led by investigator Daniel Bellemare assumed in the first two reports that the Syrian government may be linked to the assassination. The same UN tribunal acquitted Syria from the political accusations in a 2009 report.
Concerning false witnesses, Hariri said: “Some people have misled the probe and harmed Syria and Lebanon … They have harmed ties between the two countries and politicized the assassination.”
“There is a (UN) court that is doing its job, and we for our part must reassess what happened,” he said. “The tribunal is completely independent of our political accusations, which were made prematurely,” Hariri added. “The tribunal only takes into consideration evidence.”
Hezbollah Secretary General in a July press conference called on so-called March 14 powers to review their position after they accused Syria in the first minutes after the assassination “because the results of their stances and their policies have affected Lebanon and the region.” “You were the prosecutor and you were the punishers.”
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