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Page last updated at 17:37 GMT, Friday, 26 September 2008 18:37 UK

Shooting delays UN Syria inquiry

Undated photo released by CIA of alleged nuclear reactor under construction in Syria.
The US has called for a fuller report on the UN investigation

A UN inquiry into alleged Syrian nuclear activity has been delayed by the assassination of UN investigators' top contact in Damascus.

International Atomic Energy Agency Director Mohamed ElBaradei said the death of the IAEA's "main interlocutor" had made the inquiry more difficult.

Diplomats say the IAEA was dealing with Brig Gen Mohamed Suleiman before he was shot at a beach last month.

Opposition media in Syria described him as a top presidential security adviser.

Suleiman was reportedly shot dead by a sniper near the port city of Tartus.

Suleiman had responsibility for sensitive security issues, pan-Arab newspapers al-Hayat and Al-Sharq al-Awsat say.

The UN says samples taken from a desert site in Syria - which was bombed by Israeli warplanes a year ago - have so far shown no indication of nuclear material.

Tests inconclusive

Mr ElBaradei did not identify the murdered official during a closed-door meeting about the investigation into Syria's alleged nuclear activity.

SEQUENCE OF EVENTS
map
6 Sept 2007: Israel bombs site in Syria
1 Oct 2007: Syria's President Assad tells BBC site was military
24 Oct 2007: New satellite images taken show site bulldozed clear
24 April 2008: US claims Syrian site was nuclear reactor
22 June 2008:IAEA inspectors spend three days examining the al-Kibar site

However, a senior diplomat said Suleiman had escorted UN inspectors on their only investigative visit to the al-Kibar site in northern Syria in June.

"His murder made the IAEA's job that much harder," the diplomat told Reuters news agency.

"Suleiman knew what was what and had the ability to deliver things."

Earlier, Mr el-Baradei said the investigation into claims about Syria's alleged nuclear programme had so far proved inconclusive.

The al-Kibar installation was bombed by Israeli jets in September 2007. Israel and the US say the site was a nuclear plant in the making.

Damascus denies the claims but the ruins were bulldozed after the attack.

On Thursday, Washington queried what Syria had to hide with that action, and asked the IAEA for a fuller report of its investigation.

Damascus, for its part, accused the US of using "twisted logic" in pressuring his country, rather than condemning the Israeli attack.

Full results from environmental swipe samples taken in June from the bombed site are due to be released within 3 weeks.



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