Syria is willing to withdraw from neighboring Lebanon, Arab League chief Amr
Moussa said here on Monday.
"President Bashar al-Assad stressed more than once in (our)talks his firm
intention to press ahead with the implementation of the al-Taif agreement and to
withdraw from Lebanon in line with this agreement," Moussa told reporters after
meeting with the Syrian president and Foreign Minister Farouk al-Shara." The
withdrawal is part of the Syrian policy. We will see steps soon," he added.
Moussa said Assad underlined the importance to continue the "active and
special relations" between Syria and Lebanon. The Taif agreement, inked in 1989,
ended Lebanon's 1975-1990civil war and asked Syria to shift its troops in
Lebanon to the eastern Bekaa Valley.
As a main power-broker in Lebanon, Syria maintains about 14,000troops there.
Moussa said Assad also welcomed a UN role in the investigation of the
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq al-Hariri.
"It is in the interests of all that this investigation be carried out in the
fastest and most active way," Moussa quoted Assad as saying.
The investigation would help "end hearsay and assure the Lebanese people and
all of us about the legal process and that matters are proceeding on the right
track," Assad was quoted assaying.
Hariri, an opponent to Syria's influence in Lebanon, was killed in an
explosion in central Beirut last week. He resigned as prime minister last
October over disputes with incumbent Lebanese President Emile Lahoud, a Damascus
favorite.
Hariri's assassination came amid high political tension in Lebanon and
international pressure over Syria's dominance in its political affairs, just a
few months before legislative elections are due to be held.
Lebanese oppositions blamed Syrian and Lebanese authorities for the death of
Hariri and called on Syrian forces to pull out before elections in May.
The United States also called for Syria to end its occupation of
Lebanon.