|
| ||
UN Legal Counsel heads to Beirut to help Lebanese |
||
UN Legal Counsel heads to Beirut to help Lebanese set up tribunal for Hariri killing
The United Nations Legal Counsel will travel to Beirut this week to help the Lebanese authorities identify the nature and scope of the international assistance needed to create a tribunal to try those charged with the killing of former Prime Minister Hariri and others.
Nicolas Michel, the Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs, will meet with Lebanese officials as part of his visit, which follows up on Security Council resolution 1644, adopted last month.
By that text, the Council acknowledged “the Lebanese Government’s request that those eventually charged with involvement in this terrorist attack be tried by a tribunal of an international character” and asked the Secretary-General to provide assistance towards that end.
A spokesman for Mr. Annan today confirmed the planned visit by Mr. Michel, a 56-year-old native of Switzerland.
The Council’s December resolution also expanded the mandate of the UN International Independent Investigation Commission (IIIC) charged with looking into the assassination of Mr. Hariri, who was killed in a 14 February 2004 blast that also took the lives of 22 others. The Commission, now headed by Serge Brammertz, will support Lebanese probes into other terrorist attacks perpetrated in the country since 1 October 2004.
U.S. Politics: STOCK Act Passes House - 'Political Intelligence' Omission
Exhibition - West Papuan Women of Resistance: Dear Friends Of Art And West Papua
U.S. Politics: David Swanson: The Election We Should Be Following
Greenpeace: Industry Figures Confirm GM Food Is European Commercial Flop
Asia: IFJ Press Freedom In China Campaign Bulletin
Women’s Rights: 2,000 African Communities Abandon Female Genital Mutilation
Connie Lawn: Newt Gingrich Wins In South Carolina
Pacific.Scoop: Real Change In Burma No Longer A Pipe Dream – But Don’t Jump The Gun
Burma: After Political Prisoner Amnesty, Ethnic Warfare Is Rekindled In North