UNITED NATIONS -- The United States, France and Britain demanded Tuesday that Syria detain government officials suspected of involvement in the assassination of a former Lebanese prime minister and ensure their cooperation with a U.N. probe or face possible sanctions.\nThe call was contained in a draft resolution that orders Syria to make the officials or individuals "fully and unconditionally available" to the U.N. investigating commission.\nIt states that Syria must allow the commission to interview Syrians that it considers relevant to the inquiry "outside Syria and/or outside the presence of any other Syrian official if the commission so requests."\nIf Syria does not fully cooperate with the investigation, the draft says the council intends to consider "further measures" to ensure compliance, including sanctions.\nThe draft resolution also calls for anyone designated by the commission as suspected of involvement in Hariri's assassination to be subject to a travel ban and to have their assets frozen.\nThe proposed resolution would be under Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter which is militarily enforceable.\nThe United States and France circulated the resolution hours after the chief U.N. investigator, Detlev Mehlis, briefed the council on his report which implicated top Syrian and Lebanese security officials in the car bomb that killed Hariri and 20 other people.\nMehlis has said repeatedly that Syria had not fully cooperated and continuing the probe would be near impossible if Damascus didn't change course. He took that message directly to the council in his briefing, urging Syria to help "fill in the gaps" about who orchestrated the bombing, both by cooperating with a probe and studying the crime itself.\nThe draft resolution declares that "it is unacceptable that anyone should escape accountability for an act of terrorism because of his own obstruction of the investigation or failure to cooperate in good faith."\nIt would endorse the Mehlis commission's conclusion "based on Syria's suspected involvement in this terrorist act and lack of adequate cooperation to the inquiry to date, that it is incumbent upon the Syrian authorities to clarify a considerable part of the questions which remain unresolved."\nUnder the draft's provisions, Syria would also be required to renounce terrorism and "commit itself definitively to cease all support for all forms of terrorist action and all assistance to terrorist groups and to demonstrate this undertaking through concrete actions."\nU.S. Ambassador John Bolton said the Security Council would hold a meeting on Monday at ministerial level to consider the resolution. U.N. diplomats said they expect the ministers to adopt the resolution, which would give added weight to the measure and increase pressure on Syria.
Countries threaten sanctions for Syria
Governments want answers in assassination case
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