In this picture taken on April 26, 2005, the former head of the Syrian political security branch Maj Gen Rustom Ghazalah is escorted by his supporters in Lebanon. AP Photo
In this picture taken on April 26, 2005, the former head of the Syrian political security branch Maj Gen Rustom Ghazalah is escorted by his supporters in Lebanon. AP Photo

Syrian army general Rustom Ghazalah dies in hospital



BEIRUT // Rustom Ghazalah, the powerful Syrian general who was once considered the most powerful man in Lebanon and was suspected of involvement in the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Harriri, has died in a hospital in the capital Damascus, a Syrian activist and local media reported on Friday.

Ghazalah, in his early 60s, was once head of his military’s powerful political security branch and one of Syrian president Bashar Al Assad’s most trusted generals.

There was no official government comment and the circumstances of his death remain unclear.

Director of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights Rami Abdurrahman said Ghazalah died nearly two months after he was admitted with a head injury. Mr Abdurrahman said Ghazalah had been clinically dead for weeks, quoting informed medical officials in the hospital.

The Beirut-based Al Mayadeen TV, which has access to Syrian officials, and other Lebanese TV stations also reported Ghazalah’s death, quoting officials.

Reports at the time of Ghazalah’s injury said he was beaten by the bodyguards of another Syrian general, in a dramatic escalation of a political dispute.

The reports said the disagreement between the two generals started after Ghazalah’s men were not allowed to play a bigger role in a government offensive against opposition fighters battling the government.

Lebanese media reported that both Ghazalah and his rival general were sacked. Reshuffles in Syria’s security and military apparatuses are generally not made public.

Ghazalah, a Sunni from the southern village of Qarfa, rose in the military to become the intelligence chief in Lebanon in 2002, replacing long-serving general Ghazi Kenaan who became interior minister.

Ghazalah kept the post until 2005 when Syrian forces had to withdraw from the country, ending nearly three decades of military presence following massive anti-Syrian protests after Hariri’s assassination earlier that year.

In 2005, a UN probe concluded that high-ranking Syrian and Lebanese security officials, including Ghazalah, plotted the assassination of Hariri. A UN-backed tribunal is currently trying five Hizbollah members in absentia over Hariri’s assassination. Both Damascus and Hizbollah have strongly denied involvement.

In 2012, after a bomb killed four of the country’s top generals in Damascus, Ghazalah was named by Mr Al Assad as head of the political security department and stayed in the job until mid-March.

With Ghazalah’s death, several people accused by anti-Syrian Lebanese politicians of being involved in Hariri’s killing have died.

Kenaan, the interior minister, died in his Damascus office in late 2005 about a month after speaking with investigators about Hariri’s assassination. Syrian officials said he shot himself to death, but some in Lebanon believe he was killed.

Syria’s deputy defence minister Asef Shawkat was among several top generals killed in a Damascus bombing in July 2012. In 2005, an inadvertently released passage of a UN investigative report on the killing cited a witness saying that Shawkat, head of military intelligence at the time, was among those behind Hariri’s assassination. Shawkat was the brother-in-law of Mr Al Assad.

In October 2013, Maj Gen Jameh Jameh was killed while fighting rebels in eastern Syria. At the time of Hariri’s assassination, Jameh was the second highest ranking Syrian intelligence official based in Lebanon and was Syria’s intelligence chief in Beirut.

* Associated Press

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The smuggler

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Officers found 41 gold artefacts among the bags, including amulets from a funerary set which prepared the deceased for the afterlife.
Also found was a cartouche of a Ptolemaic king on a relief that was originally part of a royal building or temple. 
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Khouli conviction

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For sale

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