BEIRUT — Western intelligence agencies warned former Lebanese prime minister Sa’ad Hariri of an assassination plot against him, the pan-Arab newspaper Asharq Al Awsat reported on Sunday. It cited unnamed sources close to Hariri.

However, Major General Abbas Ebrahim, head of Lebanon’s General Security, said he had no information about an assassination plot against political figures in Lebanon. The army also said it had not uncovered any such plots.

Asharq Al Awsat reported that the sources “revealed that he had received Western warnings of an assassination attempt that was prepared against him”. It did not give further details of the alleged plot.

Hariri announced his surprise resignation on Saturday, citing a plot to kill him, and saying the climate in Lebanon resembled that before the assassination of his father Rafik Hariri, who was also prime minister, in 2005.

He criticised Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah for their role in Lebanon and other Arab countries.

Hariri travelled to Riyadh on Friday and did not return to Lebanon. His resignation was made in a televised statement from Saudi Arabia, an arch rival of Iran.

Asharq Al Awsat reported the same unnamed sources as speculating that Hariri would probably remain outside Lebanon because of the security threat against him.

On Saturday, Saudi-owned television channel Al Arabiya Al Hadath, part of the same media group as Asharq Al Awsat, reported that an assassination plot against Hariri had been foiled in Beirut days earlier, citing an unnamed source.

Saudi Gulf Affairs Minister Thamer Al Sabhan said in a television interview that Hariri’s personal security detail had “confirmed information” of a plot to kill him.

Lebanon’s internal security force said in a statement on the reports that it had no information about the matter.

— Reuters