French-Syrian Man Jailed for Association with Terrorists

Bassam Ayachi (AFP)
Bassam Ayachi (AFP)
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French-Syrian Man Jailed for Association with Terrorists

Bassam Ayachi (AFP)
Bassam Ayachi (AFP)

French-Syrian imam Bassam Ayachi was sentenced in Paris to five years in prison for association with terrorist criminals.

Considered in Belgium as a veteran radical, the 75-year-old sheikh was tried in April in the French capital for his role in Syria’s Idlib region between 2014 and 2018, AFP reported.

The court said he belonged at the “Ahrar al-Sham” terrorist group and headed its public relations office in Idlib.

A video released in March 2015 showed Ayachi entering Idlib like a warlord and giving instructions, and then standing behind a banner of then al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Nusra Front, the judge said.

She added that he also “merged military groups” and “controlled justice.”

The judge affirmed that Ayachi provided information to Belgian and French intelligence services. However, his offenses cannot be overlooked.

“The French law does not provide any exemption for police informants,” AFP quoted the magistrate as saying.

The court nevertheless decided to take this given into account.

The judge said the Defense Ministry refused to declassify documents during the investigation process, but this won’t harm Ayachi, whose rendered services can’t be denied.

The anti-ISIS sheikh, who lost his arms in Syria, was absent for the court ruling.

During the trial, he had condemned the “terrorist bastards,” stressing that he “served his people in Syria and preserved his people in France.”

Ayachi’s bodyguard, the French hardliner, Hachimi M., was sentenced to 10 years in prison for being a member of Ahrar al-Sham and a Nusra-affiliated sniper unit.

The 33-year-old computer engineer claimed he had traveled to Syria for humanitarian reasons and was given orders by Ayachi.

However, the court considered that he was into al-Qaeda’s ideology.

The defendants' lawyers declined to comment. They can appeal the two verdicts.



Dozens Die of Mysterious Illness in Besieged Sudan Town

FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo
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Dozens Die of Mysterious Illness in Besieged Sudan Town

FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo

At least 73 people have died of mysterious causes in the Sudanese town of al-Hilaliya, besieged by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, the Sudanese Doctors Union said late on Wednesday.
It is one of dozens of villages that have come under attack in eastern El Jezira state since the defection of a top RSF commander to the army, which prompted revenge attacks that have displaced more than 135,000 people.
The war between the two forces has created the world's largest humanitarian crisis, displacing more than 11 million and plunging more into hunger while drawing in foreign powers and prompting fears of state collapse, Reuters said.
While high death tolls in other parts of Jezira came as a result of RSF shelling and gunfire, in Hilaliya people have fallen ill with diarrhea, overwhelming a local hospital according to the union and three people from the area.
A network blackout enforced by the RSF has made it difficult to determine the exact cause.
One man who spoke to Reuters said three of his family members had died of the same illness, but he only found out days later when others escaped to an area with internet access.
Those who wish to leave must pay high sums at RSF checkpoints, said another man.
According to pro-democracy activists, the siege began on Oct. 29 when the RSF raided the town, killing five and surrounding residents inside three mosques.
Hilaliya is home to the family of defected commander Abuagla Keikal, which locals say may explain the siege of a previously stable trade hub that had housed 50,000 people, including many displaced from other areas.
The town's markets and warehouses were looted, witnesses said.
Satellite imagery from a Yale Humanitarian Lab report showed rapid increase in cemeteries in several Jezira towns since the latest revenge attacks began in late October. It also showed evidence of the burning of agricultural fields in the village of Azrag.