A UN-backed tribunal investigating the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri said Wednesday it is facing a severe funding crisis and will not be able to operate beyond July without immediate assistance.
The announcement by the Special Tribunal for Lebanon came as the country is in the grips of an unprecedented economic crisis - a culmination of decades of widespread corruption and mismanagement.
Although the tribunal's verdict issued last August, 15 years after Hariri's killing was disappointing for many Lebanese, ending the tribunal's work would raise concerns in the tiny country where political killings have gone without punishment for decades.

