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  Syria: interior minister commits suicide   (AP)  Updated: 2005-10-12 21:15  
 Syria's interior minister, one of several top officials caught up in the U.N. 
investigation into the slaying of Lebanon's former prime minister, died 
Wednesday. The country's official news agency said he committed suicide in his 
office. 
 The death — just days before the final U.N. investigation report is due — was 
a new and startling sign of turmoil in Syria, whose authoritarian regime is 
girding for the chance that the U.N. report might implicate high-ranking 
officials in the assassination of former Lebanese premier Rafik Hariri. He was 
killed by a bomb in February as his convoy drove through Beirut. 
 "Interior Minister Brig. Gen. Ghazi Kenaan committed suicide in his office 
before noon," the Syrian Arab News Agency reported. "Authorities are carrying 
out the necessary investigation into the incident." 
 The news agency did not mention the U.N. investigation, which is due to issue 
its report by Oct. 25. 
 Hours before he died, Kenaan contacted a Lebanese radio station and gave a 
statement, concluding with the words: "I believe this is the last statement that 
I could make." He asked the interviewer to pass his comments to other media. 
 The interior minister in Syria controls the police, but before he was 
promoted to this position in 2003, Kenaan was Syria's intelligence chief in 
Lebanon, presiding over Syria's control of its western neighbor. 
 Lebanese newspapers have reported that he was among seven senior Syrian 
officials questioned last month by the U.N. team investigating Hariri's murder. 
The other officials included Syria's last intelligence chief in Lebanon, Brig. 
Gen. Rustum Ghazale and his two aides. 
 The investigators have named as suspects four Lebanese generals who are close 
to Syria; they are under arrest. 
 Many Lebanese believe Syria played a role in Hariri's killing. The Syrian 
government has denied any involvement, but Syria dominated Lebanese political 
life until mass demonstrations and international pressure forced it to withdraw 
its troops from Lebanon at the end of April. 
 The big question in Syria is how long President Bashar Assad can last if the 
probe indicates his government played a part in Hariri's death. 
 The regime is not very popular, but it has little opposition and any revolt 
would likely be pinned on the United States, which Syrians blame for the bloody 
insurgency in neighboring Iraq. 
 The potential suspects, according to Arab media reports, include senior 
Syrian security officials, members of Assad's inner circle or even relatives. 
Some Assad family members hold powerful positions in the intelligence and 
security services. 
 Syria is reportedly planning a diplomatic offensive to discredit the report, 
which would include reaching out to China, India and Russia to help block a U.N. 
resolution and possible sanctions.  
  
  
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