Syria's Embassy In Lebanon Suspends Services As Lebanon Hands Over Former Syrian Army Officers
Syria's embassy in Lebanon suspended consular services Saturday, a day after two relatives of deposed Syrian President Bashar Assad were arrested at the Beirut airport with allegedly forged passports.
Also on Saturday, Lebanese authorities handed over dozens of Syrians - including former officers in the Syrian army under Assad - to the new Syrian authorities after they were caught illegally entering Lebanon, a war monitor and Lebanese officials said.
The embassy announced on its Facebook page that consular work was suspended "until further notice" at the order of the Syrian foreign ministry. The announcement did not give a reason for the suspension.
Two Lebanese security officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, said the suspension was ordered because the passports belonging to Assad's relatives - the wife and daughter of one of his cousins - were believed to have been forged at the embassy.
Assad's uncle, Rifaat Assad - who has been indicted in Switzerland on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity - had flown out the day before on his real passport and was not stopped, the officials said.