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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Asharq Al-Awsat

Officials Charged in Lebanon’s ‘Tainted Fuel’ Case

Zouk Power Station is seen in Zouk, north of Beirut, Lebanon March 27, 2019. Picture taken March 27, 2019. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

A Lebanese prosecutor has pressed charges against 12 people, including government officials, over a delivery of tainted fuel, a case that made headlines in March after Lebanon refused to receive a shipment from a subsidiary of Algerian state company Sonatrach to be used in the electricity sector.

Mount Lebanon Prosecutor Ghada Aoun on Wednesday charged 12 people over the case, the National News Agency (NNA) reported.

They included the general manager of the Lebanese Electricity Company Kamal Hayek, for negligence of duty.

The Ministry of Energy and Water's chief of oil installations, Sarkis Hlaiss, and director of oil Aurore Feghaly were charged for bribes and negligence of duty, it said.

Aoun last month ordered shut the offices of ZR Energy, which acted as intermediary to bring the fuel into Lebanon after the delivery was found to be "non-compliant" with Lebanese standards, contrary to official reports.

Arrest warrants have already been issued for Feghaly and the Sonatrach representative in Tarek Fawal, as well as for laboratory workers alleged to have tested fuel samples and provided false reports.

More arrest warrants were issued in absentia for Hlaiss as well as ZR Energy head Teddy Rahme, general manager Ibrahim al-Zouk and another of the company's employees.

On May 6, the judiciary questioned former energy ministers Nada Boustani and Mohammed Fneish.

In statement by its Lebanese subsidiary, Sonatrach said the media had targeted it with a "malicious and systematic campaign" of defamation.

The company, which said it had been providing fuel to the Lebanese electricity sector since 2005 through a signed contract renewed by Lebanon’s government every three years, stressed it was "not responsible... for any violation, crime, offense or any alleged transgression that could have occurred to any fuel shipment".

In Algeria, a presidential spokesman said an investigation had been ordered into the matter, but that the "Algeria as a state was not involved in such acts".

He said it was first and foremost a Lebanese case.

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