Local Editor
In a statement issued on Monday, Hezbollah denied “any involvement whatsoever” in Tueni's assassination, saying it is “awaiting the judiciary’s ruling in this case.”
“The latest wave March 14 went through was what Saudi Arabia's Al-Arabiya prepared and claimed were documents it attributed to Syrian opposition members, inventing events and fabricating accusations that have nothing to do with the reality, including the assassination of late MP Gebran Tueni,” the statement said.
While Hezbollah denied any involvement in the assassination of Tueni, it stressed its condemnation of political assassinations, noting that “some of those claiming keenness on safety of the country and its people do not enjoy the minimum sense of responsibility.”
Last week, Al-Arabiya television released what it claimed were leaked communiqués between Syrian intelligence and the state's leadership. In the documents, references were made to Hezbollah and its alleged activities with the Syrian security apparatus, according to websites.
One of the alleged communiqués – sent from the head of the operations department in Syrian Intelligence Hasan Abdel Rahman to the head of State Intelligence Assef Shawkat – claimed an operation, referred to as “mission 213,” was successfully completed ‘with the help of Hezbollah members.’
The Saudi-based television channel said this communiqué was sent on the same day MP and journalist Gebran Tueni was killed in a car bomb on Dec. 12, 2005.
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