<p>The Beirut Bar Association on Wednesday handed the public prosecutor almost 700 criminal complaints from victims of the city's deadly August 4 port blast, Lebanon's National News Agency said.</p>.<p>The explosion of a massive stockpile of ammonium nitrate in a dockside warehouse killed more than 200 people, wounded thousands and ravaged swathes of the capital Beirut.</p>.<p>"We presented 679 complaints today, in the name of the families of those killed, wounded and affected," Bar Association head Melhem Khalaf said, according to the NNA.</p>.<p>"We cannot stop until a verdict is pronounced," Khalaf said, calling the blast "a horrific catastrophe."</p>.<p>It was the first wave of complaints to be filed of around 1,400 cases being compiled by the Bar Association.</p>.<p>"We need to go deep with the ongoing investigations," Khalaf added.</p>.<p>The blast was the country's worst peacetime disaster.</p>.<p>It reignited popular outrage against the political class after it emerged officials had known the ammonium nitrate had been stored unsafely at the port for years.</p>.<p>Lebanese officials have rejected an international probe, despite demands both from home and abroad for an impartial investigation.</p>.<p>A local investigation has led to the arrest of at least 25 suspects, including the chief of the port and its customs director.</p>.<p>Experts from France and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation took part in the preliminary investigation.</p>.<p>A judicial source told AFP that Lebanon had received the report from the American experts, and was expecting one from France within the next two weeks.</p>.<p>"Much hinges on the French report to determine the causes of the explosion," the source said.</p>.<p>According to Khalaf, the FBI report relies on information from the Lebanese agencies, whereas the French one will draw on "the results of laboratory tests".</p>.<p>Lebanon has complained it has yet to receive satellite images of the port before, during and after the blast that it requested from France and Italy.</p>
<p>The Beirut Bar Association on Wednesday handed the public prosecutor almost 700 criminal complaints from victims of the city's deadly August 4 port blast, Lebanon's National News Agency said.</p>.<p>The explosion of a massive stockpile of ammonium nitrate in a dockside warehouse killed more than 200 people, wounded thousands and ravaged swathes of the capital Beirut.</p>.<p>"We presented 679 complaints today, in the name of the families of those killed, wounded and affected," Bar Association head Melhem Khalaf said, according to the NNA.</p>.<p>"We cannot stop until a verdict is pronounced," Khalaf said, calling the blast "a horrific catastrophe."</p>.<p>It was the first wave of complaints to be filed of around 1,400 cases being compiled by the Bar Association.</p>.<p>"We need to go deep with the ongoing investigations," Khalaf added.</p>.<p>The blast was the country's worst peacetime disaster.</p>.<p>It reignited popular outrage against the political class after it emerged officials had known the ammonium nitrate had been stored unsafely at the port for years.</p>.<p>Lebanese officials have rejected an international probe, despite demands both from home and abroad for an impartial investigation.</p>.<p>A local investigation has led to the arrest of at least 25 suspects, including the chief of the port and its customs director.</p>.<p>Experts from France and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation took part in the preliminary investigation.</p>.<p>A judicial source told AFP that Lebanon had received the report from the American experts, and was expecting one from France within the next two weeks.</p>.<p>"Much hinges on the French report to determine the causes of the explosion," the source said.</p>.<p>According to Khalaf, the FBI report relies on information from the Lebanese agencies, whereas the French one will draw on "the results of laboratory tests".</p>.<p>Lebanon has complained it has yet to receive satellite images of the port before, during and after the blast that it requested from France and Italy.</p>