Lebanese militant to be released after 40 years in French jail
At around 3:40 am (01:30 GMT), a convoy of six vehicles left the Lannemezan penitentiary with lights flashing, AFP journalists saw, though they were unable to catch a glimpse of the 74-year-old grey-bearded prisoner.
Abdallah was detained in 1984 and sentenced to life in prison in 1987 for his involvement in the murders of US military attache Charles Robert Ray and Israeli diplomat Yacov Barsimantov in Paris.
The Paris Court of Appeal had ordered his release "effective July 25" on the condition that he leave French territory and never return.
He had been eligible for release since 1999, but his previous requests were denied as the United States -- a civil party to the case -- consistently opposed him leaving prison.
Inmates serving life sentences in France are typically freed after fewer than 30 years.
Once out of prison, Abdallah is set to be transported to the Tarbes airport where a police plane will take him to Roissy for a flight to Beirut, according to a source close to the case.
Abdallah's lawyer, Jean-Louis Chalanset, visited for a final time on Thursday. "He seemed very happy about his upcoming release, even though he knows he is returning to the Middle East in an extremely tough context for Lebanese and Palestinian populations," Chalanset told AFP.
AFP visited Abdallah last week after the court's release decision, accompanying a lawmaker to the detention centre.
The founder of the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Factions (FARL) -- a long-disbanded Marxist anti-Israel group -- said for more than four decades he had continued to be a "militant with a struggle".
After his arrest in 1984, French police discovered submachine guns and transceiver stations in one of his Paris apartments.
The appeals court in February noted that the FARL "had not committed a violent action since 1984" and that Abdallah "today represented a past symbol of the Palestinian struggle".
The appeals judges also found the length of his detention "disproportionate" to the crimes and given his age.
Abdallah's family said they plan to meet him at Beirut airport's "honour lounge" before heading to their hometown of Kobayat in northern Lebanon where a reception is planned.
mdh/vgr/lb/tym
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Clip shows Thai shop hit by rocket strike, not 'Cambodian military positions'
Footage of a building on fire and shrouded in smoke shows the aftermath of a rocket strike in Thailand's Sisaket province, contrary to posts claiming it shows "Cambodia military positions" destroyed by Thai forces during the Southeast Asian neighbours' bloodiest military clashes in more than a decade. AFP journalists confirmed the video shows a convenience store attached to a petrol station in the northeastern Thai province, close to the border with Cambodia. "At least two Cambodian military positions were destroyed including Brigade HQ in airstrikes by Royal Thai Airforce," reads the English-language caption of a Facebook reel shared on July 24, 2025. The video shows a single-storey building covered in dark smoke. It emerged as Cambodia fired rockets and artillery shells into Thailand and the Thai military scrambled F-16 jets to carry out air strikes in a dramatic escalation in a long-standing dispute over contested ancient temples situated along their 800-kilometre (500-mile) border (archived link). Both sides blamed the other for starting the fighting, which erupted near two temples on the border. The countries agreed a truce starting July 29, following five days of intense clashes that killed at least 43 people and displaced more than 300,000 (archived link). The same clip was also shared in similar Facebook and X posts. But it does not show the result of a Thai military strike in Cambodia. Petrol station attack A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared clip led to the same footage posted on the Facebook page of Thailand's Second Army Region on the same day (archived link). Its Thai-language caption reads: "BM-21 rockets from the Cambodian side hit a PTT gas station in Ban Phue, Kantharalak district, Sisaket province. Many students and civilians were injured." A similar clip was posted on Facebook by Chatchak Ratsamikaeo, a 25-year-old farmer in Sisaket province (archived link). "I was just about to turn my car into the station when the 7-Eleven was hit," Ratsamikaeo said. "I was terrified -- my hands and feet went numb." Google Street View imagery of the convenience store attached to the petrol station matches the falsely shared video (archived link). Moreover, AFP journalists who visited the site on July 25 confirmed it shows the PTT petrol station, located 12 kilometres from the Cambodian border (archived link). Images taken by AFP photographer Lillian Suwanrumpha on July 25 show the damage caused to the store. According to a report by Thai newspaper The Nation, eight people were killed in the rocket strike (archived link). AFP has debunked other misinformation about the Thailand-Cambodia conflict.


UPI
4 hours ago
- UPI
Israel's security minister breaks agreement, prays at Temple Mount
1 of 2 | Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir greets followers after praying on the Temple Mount, the Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound, on the Jewish day of fasting, Tisha B'Av, in Jerusalem's Old City, on Sunday. Ben Gvir's prayer broke a decades old agreement that allows Jews to visit the site, but not to pray. Photo by Debbie Hill/ UPI | License Photo Aug. 3 (UPI) -- Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir visited the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem and prayed there over the weekend, breaking a longstanding agreement that allows Jews to visit the site, but not pray. The site, located in occupied East Jerusalem, is known by Jews as the Temple Mount, and Ben-Gvir's prayer prompted a statement from the Israeli prime minister's office affirming that there has been no change in the decades-old agreement. Jordan, the site's custodian, called Ben-Gvir's actions "an unacceptable provocation." Hamas called it a "deepening of the ongoing aggressions against our Palestinian people." A spokesman for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said the visit "crossed all red lines." During his visit, Ben-Gvir called for Israel to "conquer" Gaza and encouraged Palestinians to leave the embattled region. Temple Mount is the most holy place for Jews as it is the site of two Biblical temples. It is the third most holy site for Muslims, who claim it is where the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven. The Waqf, the Islamic endowment that runs this site, said Ben-Gvir was one of 1,250 Jews who visited the compound Sunday morning. Ben-Gvir has been convicted of supporting terrorism and inciting anti-Arab racism in Israel in the past.


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Zohran Mamdani's views on Palestine are embarrassing
Zohran Mamdani embraces countless lefty causes, but opposing Israel is — as he himself said on the campaign trail — 'central to my identity.' Believe him, judge him accordingly — and realize this isn't about justice, but hate. He may drop his calls to defund the NYPD or fall short in hiking taxes on the rich, but he'll never stop targeting the Jewish state and vilifying all who support it. Advertisement Only on the topic of Israel and Palestine does Mamdani lose his grin, quit cocking his head and enter a grim space of steely hate. It's a lifelong obsession, soaked up at the knee of his father, a career 'postcolonialist' academic. Palestinian 'liberation' (from Israel, not from the barbaric extremists of Hamas or the corruptocrats of Fatah) was a 'driving force' for Zohran way back in his days at Bowdoin College, where he started a chapter of an anti-Israel club — the only time he has run anything. Advertisement In December 2023 remarks now resurfacing, Mamdani insisted the rest of us are just ignorant: Pro-Israel politicians' 'answers were written around 20, 30 years ago. They speak to a reality that does not exist,' he charged — as if the worldwide growth of antisemitism somehow made the Jewish state less necessary, rather than more. Reality? Israel is an actual country of 10 million (including millions of Arabs!), whereas 'Palestine' is an entity that has never existed, one nobody even imagined before Israel's creation. Democrats' mayoral nominee also slammed Western supporters of Israel's answer to Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, atrocities as delusional, 'explaining' that 'for so many people, Israel is not a place, it is not a country. It's an idea.' Advertisement Funny: That's surely at least as true of him and his fellow anti-Israel obsessives the world over. He's not a Palestinian nor even an Arab, has never been to Israel and has no plans to go. Nor does he show anything like the concern for other oppressed Muslims, whether the Uighers in China or the Rohingyas in Burma. Those peoples are clearly targeted for elimination by the governments that control their lands, whereas the Palestinian population has grown several times over in the decades that Israel's supposedly been trying to genocide them. Advertisement This obsession isn't about the oppressed: It's about the Jews. We understand that lefties the world over don't consciously see that it's about the Jews, but the double and triple standards allow for no other rational explanation. That Mamdani dresses up this ancient hate in the latest jargon doesn't make it, or him, any less despicable.