Lebanon's prime minister Saad al-Hariri has said he was wrong to accuse Syria of killing his father, Rafik al-Hariri, in 2005 and said the charge against Damascus had been politically motivated.
Mr Hariri's comments to Asharq al-Awsat newspaper, published today, were the clearest repudiation to date of his earlier accusation that Syria was behind the Beirut bombing which killed his father and 22 others five years ago.
Syria has repeatedly denied the charge.
The assassination provoked a domestic and international outcry which forced Syrian president Bashar al-Assad to withdraw troops from Lebanon, ending nearly three decades of military presence in its smaller neighbour.
Mr Hariri has since mended relations with Damascus, visiting Mr Assad several times in the last year and stressing Lebanon's need for strong ties with Syria.
"We assessed the mistakes that we made with Syria, that harmed the Syrian people and relations between the two countries," Mr Hariri told the newspaper.
"At a certain stage we made mistakes and accused Syria of assassinating the martyred premier. This was a political accusation, and this political accusation has finished."
Rafik al-Hariri's killing remains a highly charged issue in Lebanon. A United Nations investigation initially implicated Syria, but media reports have said that the UN prosecutor may issue indictments against members of the militant Shia group
Hizbullah denies any involvement. Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has dismissed the UN tribunal as an Israeli project, but Mr Hariri has defended the court's independence.
Arguments over the tribunal's credibility, and the prospect of possible Hizbullah indictments, has shaken Lebanon's fragile national unity government which is led by Mr Hariri and includes Hizbullah ministers.
"The tribunal is not linked to the political accusations, which were hasty ... The tribunal will only look at evidence," Mr Hariri was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Reuters