Judges at a UN-backed tribunal will rule Wednesday (March 7th) whether to acquit one of four suspected Hizbullah members accused of the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese premier Rafiq al-Hariri, AFP reported.
The Special Tribunal for Lebanon will hand down its judgement after the defence called for proceedings to be dropped against Hussein Oneissi, claiming the prosecution has failed to prove its case.
Al-Hariri, who was Lebanon's prime minister until his resignation in October 2004, was killed in February 2005, when a suicide bomber detonated a van packed with explosives next to his armoured convoy on the Beirut seafront.
The "chamber judges will render a decision on an application submitted by the defence seeking a judgement of acquittal" on Wednesday, the court said in a statement.
Oneissi, 44, who along with the three other suspects is being tried in absentia by the court based in the Netherlands, faces five charges.
Notably, he is accused of having recruited and prepped Ahmed Abu Adass, a Lebanese Islamist who made a videotape claiming the assassination which was sent to international news organisations on the day of the attack.
A UN investigation later found that Abu Adass, who disappeared and was reportedly in Syria, was likely just a fall guy for the plot and was not the bomber.
The prosecution in the trial, which opened in January 2014, rested its case against all four suspected Hizbullah members in February.
But Oneissi's defence has argued that "not one piece of evidence was presented or supported the fact that Oneissi took part in fabricating the video... or editing the text".
They also argued "the prosecution has not proven that Oneissi had the intent to commit a crime against the state security, or that he knew that an act of terrorism was to be committed".
Three other suspects, Salim Ayyash, Assad Sabra and Hassan Habib Merhi are also being tried in absentia.