BEIRUT: A Lebanese spy chief once jailed in connection to the assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri gave testimony Tuesday to the international tribunal tasked with trying the crime.
Jamil Sayyed, the former director of Lebanon’s General Security, was called to the stand in the Netherlands as a witness for Hassan Oneissi, one of the four defendants on trial. All four are at large and are being tried in absentia.
Sayyed, who won a seat in Parliament in Lebanon’s May 6 election, is expected to give testimony through Thursday.
He was detained months after the February 14, 2005 killing along with three other generals but released nearly four years later without charges.
The tribunal indicted five members of the militant Hezbollah group in the truck bombing that killed Hariri and 21 others. The five indicted and later put on trial in absentia included one of Hezbollah’s top military commanders, Mustafa Badreddine, who was killed in Syria in 2016.
Hezbollah denies involvement in the murder and the group’s leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, has denounced the court as a conspiracy by his archenemies — the US and Israel.
Hariri, who also held Saudi citizenship, was one of Lebanon’s most influential Sunni leaders, with wide connections in the Arab world and the international community.
Judge David Re apologized on behalf of the tribunal for Sayyed’s alleged rough treatment while he was detained in Lebanon.
Former Lebanese spy chief testifies at Hariri murder trial
Former Lebanese spy chief testifies at Hariri murder trial
- Lebanon former spy chief, now a member of new parliament to testify at Hariri special tribunal in La Hague.
- Jamil Sayyed, the former director of Lebanon’s General Security, was called to the stand in the Netherlands as a witness