Bomb Kills Anti-Syrian In Lebanon


"Those who are behind this are the enemies of Lebanon."

Syrian Information Minister Mehdi Dakhlallah.

Journalist and lawmaker Gibran Tueni, a relentless critic of Syria who spent months in France fearing assassination, was killed Monday in a car bombing Eonly a day after returning to his homeland.

A previously unknown group claimed responsibility, but suspicion quickly settled on Syria, where the state-controlled media has been highly critical of anti-Syrian reports by Lebanese journalists.

The slaying silenced the blistering editorial voice of Tueni, the 48-year-old general manager of Lebanon's leading newspaper, An-Nahar, founded in 1933 by his grandfather.

His motorcade was attacked hours before the United Nations released a follow-up report on its probe of the February car bomb assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

The report by chief U.N. investigator Detlev Mehlis, who earlier implicated Syria in the killing, said new evidence reinforced investigators' belief that Syrian and Lebanese intelligence likely knew about the Hariri killing in advance.

The new report accused Syria of trying to obstruct the probe by demanding it revise earlier findings after a crucial witness recanted.

After Mehlis' earlier report, the U.N. Security Council warned Syria it would face further action Epossibly including sanctions Eif it didn't cooperate fully.

While Syria has denied involvement in both killings, the United States, France and Tueni's Lebanese allies said the slaying would not distract them from pressuring Syria to cooperate with the U.N. inquiry.

The White House condemned the assassination of a "Lebanese patriot." Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said "Syrian interference in Lebanon continues, and it must end completely."

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, speaking for the European Union, said the perpetrators "who seek to destabilize Lebanon and the region through such cowardly attacks will not succeed."

France indicated it would push ahead with efforts against Syria at the Security Council.

In a letter to Tueni's widow, French President Jacques Chirac said the journalist's death "is the opportunity to redouble the efforts so that the Security Council resolutions are fully put to work."