
Nadim
Gemayel, son of the late President-elect Bashir Gemayel,
is gaining an increasingly visible profile on the political
scene, demanding in the run-up to the 21st anniversary
of his father's assassination that the judiciary act to
arrest the culprits. The younger Gemayel visited the Justice
Palace in Beirut on Monday for separate meetings with
State Prosecutor Adnan Addoum and Tanios Khoury, president
of the Higher Judicial Council, An Nahar reported on Tuesday.
It quoted him a saying that he discussed with Addoum the
pending case of his father's assassination on Sept. 14,
1982, in a powerful explosion that demolished the Phalange
Party headquarters in Ashrafieh, only days after he was
elected president at the peak of Israel's invasion that
summer.
Gemayel recalled that a suspect, Habib Shartouni, was
arrested and formally charged with placing the deadly
explosives in the building. But he was freed when "known
armed elements" stormed into the Roumieh prison in
the final phase of civil war turmoil in 1990. He demanded
that re-arrest and trial of his father's suspected killer.
Addoum, Gemayel said, told him that the file was ready
for trial and referred him to Khoury, who advised him
to avoid a trial in absentia and to first seek Shartouni's
arrest. However, for this to happen "the security
forces will have to act to find his whereabouts and arrest
him," he quoted the top judge as saying.
Shartouni was said at the time to be a member of the pro-Damascus
Syrian Social Nationalist Party, but officials suspect
he was only a front for an intricate plot in which there
were other unknown accomplices.
The young Gemayel dropped another bombshell while at the
Justice Palace Monday. According to An Nahar he requested
from Addoum permission to visit with Samir Geagea, the
imprisoned former commander of the outlawed Lebanese Forces
militia.
Geagea is held in a maximum-security jail at the Defense
Ministry, serving three concurrent life sentences for
killing political adversaries during the civil war. Bashir
Gemayel had formed the Phalange-dominated Lebanese Forces
in 1980 as the Christians' main fighting arm during the
war.
"Any convict, irrespective of his crime, is entitled
to visitors – that is in countries that respect
human rights and freedoms and advocate democracy,"
said the young Gemayel, who was a toddler when his father
was killed.
Addoum, he said, promised to consider his request.