German court convicts Syrian Daesh member of war crimes for torturing captives

Police officers stand guard in Essen, western Germany. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 12 July 2023
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German court convicts Syrian Daesh member of war crimes for torturing captives

BERLIN: A German court convicted a Syrian man Tuesday of torturing captives while he was a member of the Daesh group in Syria.
The Berlin regional court found Raed E. guilty of war crimes, membership of a foreign terrorist organization and other offenses. It sentenced the defendant, whose surname wasn’t released in line with German privacy rules, to 11 years in prison.
Prosecutors said the 32-year-old joined Daesh group in 2014 and participated in targeted attacks on the Shueitat tribe in the Deir Ezzor region of eastern Syria.
A man who was detained and tortured by the defendant testified at the trial.
The defendant left Syria in 2015 and traveled to Germany, where he was arrested last year.
The ruling can be appealed.

 


Israeli court postpones trial of Adnan Ghaith until Jan. 20

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Israeli court postpones trial of Adnan Ghaith until Jan. 20

  • Palestinian Authority’s governor of Jerusalem charged with violating military orders

LONDON: An Israeli court on Sunday postponed the trial of the Palestinian Authority’s governor of Jerusalem until Jan. 20.

Adnan Ghaith, who lives in the Silwan neighborhood of the city, is charged with violating Israeli military orders issued against him since he was appointed to the position in 2018.

Israeli authorities have imposed several military restrictions on Ghaith, including preventing his entry into the occupied West Bank and limiting his movement within Silwan.

He is also banned from communicating with 51 national and official figures, including Palestinian leaders.

Ghaith has been under house arrest for various lengths of time since 2018. Last year he traveled abroad — to Morocco — for the first time to attend an event supporting Jerusalem, after years of being denied the right to travel.

The Palestinian Authority said that Israeli authorities’ measures against Ghaith were intended “to cut off his connection with the political and national scenes in the occupied capital (Jerusalem),” the WAFA news agency reported.