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French court orders release of Lebanese militant Abdallah after 40 years in prison

Georges Ibrahim Abdallah arrives at the Pau appeal court in southwest France, 18 February, 2010
Georges Ibrahim Abdallah arrives at the Pau appeal court in southwest France, 18 February, 2010 Copyright  AP Photo/Bob Edme, File
Copyright AP Photo/Bob Edme, File
By Nathan Joubioux & Gavin Blackburn
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Incarcerated for almost 40 years for complicity in the assassination of US and Israeli diplomats, the man who considers himself a political prisoner will be able to return to Lebanon.

A French court ordered the conditional release of a Lebanese leftist militant on Thursday after more than 40 years in detention in France.

Georges Ibrahim Abdallah was serving a life sentence for complicity in the murders of two diplomats, one American and one Israeli, in Paris in 1982.

The Paris Court of Appeal ruled that Abdallah, who has been imprisoned in France since his arrest in 1984, can be released next Friday, provided he leaves France and never returns, judicial authorities stated.

His lawyer, Jean-Louis Chalanset, told reporters that Abdallah wants to return to Lebanon upon his release and remains "a communist militant who supports the Palestinian struggle and fights against the invasion of his country by Israel."

He described Abdallah as the longest-held political prisoner in Europe.

"He has never renounced his convictions," Chalanset said, adding that US authorities had lobbied the Paris court to reject the 74-year-old's release request.

"So it's also a political victory, even after nearly 41 years in detention, against the United States."

Supporters of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah demand his release during a protest in front of the French embassy in Beirut, 30 April, 2010
Supporters of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah demand his release during a protest in front of the French embassy in Beirut, 30 April, 2010 AP Photo

'Political scandal'

Abdallah's lawyer Jean-Louis Chalanset welcomed the decision, saying, "It's both a judicial victory and a political scandal that he was not released earlier."

A French court ordered Abdallah's release in November of last year, conditional on his departure from France.

But anti-terror prosecutors opposed the move, arguing that he had not changed his political views and appealed the decision which was subsequently suspended.

A verdict was supposed to have been delivered in February, but a Paris appeals court postponed a decision, saying it was unclear if Abdallah could prove he had paid compensation to the plaintiffs, something he has consistently refused to do.

Abdallah has always refused to acknowledge his involvement in the assassinations of the diplomats, describing them instead as "acts of resistance" against "Israeli and American oppression" and considering himself a political prisoner.

He was sentenced to life in prison in 1987 for his involvement in the murders of US military attaché Charles Robert Ray and Israeli diplomat Yacov Barsimantov.

At the last hearing on 19 June, the appeals court ruled in favour of his release on the grounds that the length of his detention was "disproportionate" to the crimes committed.

The court said his release will allow him to return to Lebanon and "finish his days" in his village in the north of the country, adding that he no longer posed a risk of disturbing public order.

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