<span>On February 14, 2005, about six minutes after Rafik Hariri left Cafe de l'Etoile and was driving past the St</span><span> George Hotel on Beirut's Corniche, a truck bomb exploded near his motorcade, killing the </span><span>prime </span><span>minister of Lebanon and 21 others. </span> <span>The assassination was a moment that changed Lebanon for ever, and it also altered the course of </span><span>Nazik Hariri's life. She and Rafik had been married since 1976, and had four children together: Houssam, Ayman, Fahd and Hind. </span> <span>In this picture, Nazik </span><span>is seen beside her late husband's tomb in Martyr's Square on March 22, 2005. The cameras were there because she was accompanied by then Pakistan </span><span>president Pervez Musharraf. Reports from the day this photo was taken, five weeks after the assassination, said thousands of people were still visiting the site every day to mourn. </span> <span>In a 2000 interview with </span><span><em>Prestige </em></span><span>magazine, </span><span>Nazik said the two traits she most admired in her husband were his "patience and ambition". In the same discussion, she said she hoped her children wouldn't go into politics.</span> <span>They haven't. Lebanon's former </span><span>prime </span><span>minister Saad Hariri is the son of Rafik's first wife, </span><span>Nidal Bustani, from Iraq. </span><span>Nazik's son Ayman is the billionaire co-founder of the Vero app. </span><span>Nazik has regularly been listed on </span><span><em>Forbes</em></span><span>'s billionaire lists, which report that she lives in an ornate mansion in Paris built by Gustave Eiffel. She works on many charitable causes, with a focus on education and health.</span>