Hariri sees new page in Lebanon ties with Syria

DAMASCUS, (Reuters) – Lebanese Prime Minister Saad  al-Hariri said yesterday he agreed with Syrian President Bashar  al-Assad on practical steps to open up “new horizons” in ties  between the two Arab neighbours.

Hariri was speaking at the end of a two-day visit to Syria  that marked the end to nearly five years of animosity between  Damascus and the broad political alliance led by Hariri.

“We want to open new horizons between the two countries,”  Hariri told a news conference at the Lebanese embassy in  Damascus.

He said his three rounds of “excellent” talks with the  Syrian leader were frank and based on clarity.
“There will be serious steps from our side and on the part  of President Bashar al-Assad to translate this cordial and  serious relationship into steps on the ground in several  fields,” Hariri said, without giving details.

A senior Syrian official, Buthaina Shaaban, had described  the talks as constructive, cordial and transparent. Assad had  extended a warm welcome to Hariri upon his arrival in the Syrian  capital on Saturday.
Hariri said the talks did not cover the 2005 assassination  of his father, statesman Rafik al-Hariri, but that Assad had  agreed the issue now was in the hands of a special court set up  in The Hague to indict and punish the killers.

Lebanon’s ties with Syria hit rock bottom after Hariri’s  “March 14” alliance accused Syria of assassinating Rafik  al-Hariri, in February 2005. They also blamed Damascus for  attacking and killing other politicians and journalists.

Syria denies the allegations. The special court has yet to  indict anyone for the killing.
Outrage in Lebanon over the assassination and international  pressure forced Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon in  April 2005, ending three decades of military presence in its  smaller neighbour. Lebanese analysts say an improvement of ties with Damascus  would bridge a political divide in Beirut, easing sectarian  tensions and providing Hariri with the necessary clout to push  through long-delayed economic and other reforms.