Lebanese judge requests retrial of former Israeli agent acquitted on prison torture charges

Amer Al-Fakhoury was acquitted of arresting and torturing Lebanese citizens at Khiam prison, right. (AP)
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Updated 17 March 2020
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Lebanese judge requests retrial of former Israeli agent acquitted on prison torture charges

  • Free Patriotic Movement, Hezbollah criticized after military tribunal orders Amer Al-Fakhoury’s immediate release

BEIRUT: A decision on Monday by Lebanon’s military court to drop charges against a former Israeli agent accused over prison torture has prompted criticism of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) and Hezbollah.

The tribunal acquitted Amer Al-Fakhoury on charges relating to the kidnap, arrest and torture of Lebanese citizens at Khiam prison during Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon.

The hearing, headed by Brig. Hussein Abdullah, ordered the release of Al-Fakhoury on the grounds that more than a decade had passed since the offences were alleged to have taken place.

However, following public pressure, the government’s commissioner to the Military Court of Appeal, Judge Ghassan El-Khoury, on Tuesday asked the Military Court of Appeals to overturn the tribunal’s ruling and issue a warrant for Al-Fakhoury’s arrest so that he could be put on trial again.

Al-Fakhoury had been accused of “kidnapping, arresting and torturing Lebanese citizens inside the Khiam prison, which led to the death of two prisoners in 1998.” But the military tribunal ruled that “he should be released immediately unless he is arrested in another case.”

The Lebanese General Security arrested Al-Fakhoury in mid-September 2019 and in a statement described him as “a former commander of Khiam prison” who had confessed “to dealing with the Israeli enemy and working for it. After escaping in 2000 to occupied Palestine, he obtained an Israeli ID and an Israeli passport that he used to leave the occupied Palestinian territories.”

Al-Fakhouri moved to the US where he lived with his family and was arrested during a visit to Beirut after a member of the General Security recognized his name. He has spent the last few months of his arrest in hospital for health reasons.

Despite the world’s preoccupation with the coronavirus outbreak, the verdict sparked strong reactions on social media.

Lebanese Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt tweeted: “At the height of the health and economic crisis, the devil’s advocate at the center of decision, which has dual loyalties, finds the appropriate fatwa for the release of agent Amer Al-Fakhoury.

“What is the benefit of all judicial formations and talk about the independence of the judiciary? It’s the poison potion for the presidency.”

Lebanese MP Roula Al-Tabash, a lawyer and member of the Future bloc, said: “A legal problem that has been overlooked relates to calculating the passage of time and another to continuous crime. The suspicion of the timing of the verdict under the shadow of public quarantine in the country and the suspicion of a presidential ambition are behind what happened.

“Nothing that happens in the military tribunal passes without the consent of the guardian. Is there anyone who can answer these questions?”

Former minister, Maj. Gen. Ashraf Rifi, said that Al-Fakhoury “was released with a cover from Hezbollah, so stop lying. Today, the formula ‘Be with Hezbollah and do whatever you want’ appears to be in force and it is a scandal.”

Hezbollah’s group of lawyers said in a statement that the verdict was “a black day in the history of Lebanese justice and the Lebanese judiciary.” The statement called on MPs to amend the penal law and the Code of Criminal Procedure to prevent any repetition of such verdicts.

The leader of the FPM Gebran Bassil denied any role in the court’s decision. He also rejected any links to an alleged pledge he made to the US during his time as Lebanon’s foreign minister, to release Al-Fakhoury because he was an American citizen.

Bassil’s office stressed that he “does not know Al-Fakhoury and has no relation whatsoever with him.”
 


Morocco aims to boost legal cannabis farming and tap a global boom

Updated 4 sec ago
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Morocco aims to boost legal cannabis farming and tap a global boom

BAB BERRED: Since he started growing cannabis at 14, Mohamed Makhlouf has lived in the shadows, losing sleep while bracing for a knock on his door from authorities that could mean prison or his entire harvest confiscated.
But after decades of operating in secret, Makhlouf finally has gained peace of mind as Morocco expands legal cultivation and works to integrate veteran growers like him into the formal economy.
On his farmland deep in the Rif Mountains, stalks of a government-approved cannabis strain rise from the earth in dense clusters. He notices when police pass on a nearby road. But where the crop’s aroma once meant danger, today there is no cause for concern. They know he sells to a local cooperative.
“Legalization is freedom,” Makhlouf said. “If you want your work to be clean, you work with the companies and within the law.”
The 70-year-old Makhlouf’s story mirrors the experience of a small but growing number of farmers who started in Morocco’s vast black market but now sell legally to cooperatives producing cannabis for medicinal and industrial use.
New market begins to sprout
Morocco is the world’s biggest producer of cannabis and top supplier of the resin used to make hashish. For years, authorities have oscillated between looking the other way and cracking down, even as the economy directly or indirectly supports hundreds of thousands of people in the Rif Mountains, according to United Nations reports and government data.
Abdelsalam Amraji, another cannabis farmer who joined the legal industry, said the crop is crucial to keeping the community afloat.
“Local farmers have tried cultivating wheat, nuts, apples, and other crops, but none have yielded viable results,” he said.
The region is known as an epicenter of anti-government sentiment and growers have lived for years with arrest warrants hanging over them. They avoided cities and towns. Many saw their fields burned in government campaigns targeting cultivation.
Though cannabis can fetch higher prices on the black market, the decreased risk is worth it, Amraji said.
“Making money in the illegal field brings fear and problems,” he said. “When everything is legal, none of that happens.”
Market remains under tight regulation
The change began in 2021 when Morocco became the first major illegal cannabis producer, and the first Muslim-majority country, to pass a law legalizing certain forms of cultivation.
Officials heralded the move as a way to lift small-scale farmers like Makhlouf and Amraji out of poverty and integrate cannabis-growing regions into the economy after decades of marginalization.
In 2024, King Mohammed VI pardoned more than 4,800 farmers serving prison sentences to allow longtime growers “to integrate into the new strategy,” the justice ministry said at the time.
Since legalization was enacted in 2022, Morocco has tightly regulated every step of production and sale from seeds and pesticides to farming licenses and distribution. Though certain cultivation is authorized, officials have shown no sign of moving toward legalization or reforms targeting recreational consumers.
“We have two contradictory missions that are really to allow the same project to succeed in the same environment,” said Mohammed El Guerrouj, director-general of Morocco’s cannabis regulatory agency. “Our mission as policemen is to enforce regulations. But our mission is also to support farmers and operators so they succeed in their projects.”
Licensing and cooperatives are part of new ecosystem
The agency issued licenses last year to more than 3,371 growers across the Rif and recorded nearly 4,200 tons of legal cannabis produced.
Near the town of Bab Berred, the Biocannat cooperative buys cannabis from roughly 200 small farmers during harvest season. The raw plant is transformed into neat vials of CBD oil, jars of lotion and chocolates that have spread across Morocco’s pharmacy shelves.
Some batches are milled into industrial hemp for textiles. For medicinal use and export, some of the product is refined into products with less than 1 percent THC, the psychoactive compound that gives cannabis its high.
Aziz Makhlouf, the cooperative’s director, said legalization created a whole ecosystem that employed more than just farmers.
“There are those who handle packaging, those who handle transport, those who handle irrigation — all of it made possible through legalization,” said Makhlouf, a Bab Berred native whose family has long been involved in cannabis farming.
Legalization has brought licenses, formal cooperatives and the hope of steady income without fear of arrest. But the shift also has exposed the limits of reform. The legal market remains too small to absorb the hundreds of thousands who depend on the illicit trade and the new rules have introduced more pressures, farmers and experts say.
Protests erupted in parts of nearby Taounate in August after cooperatives there failed to pay growers for their crop. Farmers waved banners reading “No legalization without rights” and “Enough procrastination,” furious that payments they were promised for working legally at the government’s urging never came, local media reported.
Illegal cultivation persists
The government insists the transformation is only beginning and challenges can be overcome.
But black market demand remains high. Today, cannabis is grown legally on 14,300 acres (5,800 hectares) in the Rif, while more than 67,000 acres (27,100 hectares) are used for illegal growing, according to government data. The number of farmers entering the legal system remains tiny compared with the number thought to be tied to the illicit market.
An April report from the Global Institute Against Transnational Organized Crime characterized the industry as “more one of coexistence of both markets than a decisive transition from one to the other.”
“A substantial proportion of the population continue to rely on illicit cannabis networks for income generation, perpetuating the dynamics that the state is trying to reform,” the report said.
For now, Morocco’s two cannabis economies exist side by side — one regulated and one outlawed — as the country tries to coax a centuries-old trade out of the shadows without leaving its farmers behind.
“Cannabis is legal now, just like mint,” Amraji said. “I never imagined I’d one day be authorized to grow it. I’m shocked.”