Saudi Arabia is compounding Arab strain on Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri to reject an worldwide tribunal investigating the February 2005 assassination of his father, previous Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, sources advised Haaretz. The United Nations-backed tribunal is anticipated to title Hezbollah, the Iranian- and Syrian-backed group which has a sturdy presence in Lebanon's political establishment, as complicit within the Valentine's Day blast which killed Rafik Hariri as his convoy travelled by Beirut. Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri
Photo by: AP
In return for Saad Hariri's cooperation, Hezbollah would guarantee that it would not harm the prime minister. The radical Shi'ite organization would also avoid any overt military activities and Hariri would be allowed to maintain his own security apparatus. The Saudis, considered the Hariri family's patrons, have stepped up stress on Hariri to convince him to accept the "compromise" planned by Saudi Arabia and Syria that aims to defuse Lebanon's political crisis. The fact that Saudi Arabia has joined Syria in pressuring Hariri suggests that the chances have increased significantly that the prime minister will accept the deal. For the time being,
office 2010 activation key, however, Saad Hariri is refusing to make a decision. Last week,
microsoft office 2010 Home And Student product key, Hariri denied a report inside Lebanese daily Al Diyar that he had agreed to distance himself from the global tribunal's report "for Lebanon's interests." Previous Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah,
windows 7 pro 32bit, May 25, 2001.
Photo by: AP
Hariri traveled to New York on Monday for a meeting with Saudi King Abdullah, after Saudi-Syrian mediation efforts were put on hold because of the king's trip to the United States for emergency surgery. But now that the king is recovering, stress has resumed on Hariri, who is the head of the March 14 alliance,
office pro 2010 activation, Hezbollah's rivals in Lebanon, which took power following the assassination. Haaretz has learned that the proposed compromise involves Hariri relinquishing the demand that the international tribunal investigate his father's assassination. He would have to make a statement in which he expresses his rejection of the tribunal's work. Hariri would apparently be supported by Hezbollah in efforts to disarm Palestinian groups operating outside the refugee camps in the country, even though their numbers are minor compared to those inside the camps. Such a move would be interpreted as another reassertion of Lebanese sovereignty in line with the Taif Agreement of 1989, which ended the Lebanese Civil War. In that deal, government forces disarmed militias; Hezbollah was the only group that refused to disarm. On Tuesday, the Al Nahar daily reported that Syrian President Bashar Assad had told the Saudis that if they are interested in a powerful Lebanon, the indictments that the international tribunal is anticipated to issue, should be rejected. The newspaper reported that Assad informed the Saudis that "we must act together to stop the indictments." The Lebanese daily Al Safir reported earlier this week that Assad had spoken by phone with the Saudi king, but avoided discussing the compromise proposal, fearing wiretapping by the Americans. The newspaper said the Syrian leader spoke in code about the situation in Lebanon and conditioned a future visit to Beirut with the Saudi king on Hariri's acceptance of the compromise. The international tribunal is anticipated to issue indictments in mid-January against some of the suspects within the assassination, Western resources advised Haaretz. But at this stage there are no plans to release the details or the identities of the suspects. The information will be kept under wraps until the judge investigating the murder completes the evaluation of the information. The details of the indictments are anticipated to be made public by April. Despite efforts to keep things under wraps, it is also expected that information will leak and the indictments will say senior Hezbollah members had a role in Rafik Hariri's murder. Strain by Hezbollah has included death threats on Saad Hariri, whose security has been stepped up, according to reports in Lebanon. Tensions have also been on the rise between Hezbollah and March 14 activists in Beirut. The latter stay away from neighborhoods controlled by Hezbollah, and a number of the group's leaders have traveled abroad for "holidays," sources say. Meanwhile, Lebanese security resources said they had uncovered more equipment,
microsoft office Home And Business 2010 keygen, allegedly belonging to Israeli spies, during the Chouf Mountains. The resources said Hezbollah helped locate the equipment, which was allegedly used to spy on the coastal plain and the Bekaa Valley. Ten day ago, the Lebanese Army said it had uncovered "spying equipment."