On 7 May 2002, Irani was walking down the popular
Hamra Street on his way to celebrate the birthday of his 5-year-old daughter, Yasmina, when he was kidnapped without a trace. His lack of resistance suggested that he knew who his kidnappers were. Starting 8 May 2002, Ramzi's friends began to receive brief anonymous phone calls during which callers would say that Ramzi's car was seen in Beirut. After alerting the police and visiting the places mentioned by the callers, it appeared that the claims were false. On 9 May 2002,
Amnesty International issued a statement to express the fear that Irani could be detained incommunicado and subjected to torture. Irani's rotting corpse was found on 21 May in the back of his car. The official cause of death was a bullet piercing to the heart. His body was discovered seven hours after the assassination of
Jihad Jibril, son of
PFLP-GC leader
Ahmed Jibril in Beirut. The two assassinations being clearly unconnected, some think that the kidnappers dumped Irani's corpse in the aftermath of Jibril's assassination for diversion purposes. A newsportal,
Al Qanat, revealed they had received a report saying that Irani had been murdered because they feared he would speak out about his abductors and that it would have created a "big political crisis." Ramzi Irani's murder is still a cold case like many other brutal assassinations which have occurred against opponents of the
Syrian occupation of Lebanon during the recent years. Many people in Lebanon point the finger at Syria and their agents inside Lebanon. == Legacy ==