Beirut: Lebanon’s highest court on Thursday decided to remove the chief prosecutor investigating last year’s massive Beirut port explosion, following legal challenges by senior officials he had accused of negligence that led to the blast, a judicial official and the country’s official news agency said.
The Court of Cassation called for a new investigating judge to be appointed to lead the probe, nearly six months after it had started.
Families of the victims and survivors have accused the ruling political class of corruption and negligence that led to the explosion of ammonium nitrate, a dangerous chemical stored in the port for years.
A dozen family members held a protest and blocked traffic, burning tires outside the Palace of Justice on Thursday.
“Don’t be afraid. Don’t leave the case,” Yousra Abou Saleh, a mother who lost her son in the explosion, pleaded with the judge. In a reference to the ruling class, she said, weeping: “God is greater than all of them.”
Human Rights Watch, the New-York based watchdog, said the decision to remove Investigating Judge Fadi Sawwan “makes a mockery of justice’” and is an “insult to the victims.”
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The decision shows the courts in Lebanon “have drawn the red lines: politicians are not subject to the rule of law,” said Aya Majzoub, of Human Rights Watch.
The explosion, one of the largest non-nuclear blasts in history, has been one of the most traumatic national experiences the Lebanese have faced. Family members of those killed had been sceptical of a transparent and independent investigation into the Aug. 4 explosion, in a country where a culture of impunity has prevailed for decades.
Judge Sawwan had accused and summoned for questioning Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister and three former ministers on suspicion of negligence that led to the deadly explosion.