UAE to lift Lebanon travel ban on May 7, PM Salam welcomes decision

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Updated 04 May 2025
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UAE to lift Lebanon travel ban on May 7, PM Salam welcomes decision

  • UAE will lift a ban for its citizens traveling to Lebanon as of May 7, 2025

DUBAI: The UAE Foreign Ministry announced Sunday that it will lift a ban on its citizens traveling to Lebanon as of May 7, 2025, following a visit by the Lebanese head of state last week, according to WAM News Agency. 

The decision comes after a joint statement issued on Thursday, announcing that Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed agreed to implement measures to facilitate travel and improve movement between the two countries.

The UAE banned its citizens from traveling to Lebanon in 2021. Lebanese citizens were not banned from traveling to the UAE.

The Prime Minister of Lebanon, Nawaf Salam, stated that the decision demonstrated the strong ties between Beirut and Abu Dhabi and “deserves all thanks and appreciation” for the UAE and its president, the National News Agency reported.

“Lebanon and (the Lebanese) people eagerly look forward to welcoming their Emirati brothers, as well as visitors from across the Gulf and the Arab world,” Salam added.


Germany charges suspected former Syrian intelligence agent with dozens of murders

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Germany charges suspected former Syrian intelligence agent with dozens of murders

  • Accused, identified as Fahad A, is suspected of interrogating, torturing and killing inmates in Damascus prison under Bashar Assad
German prosecutors have charged a suspected former member of Syrian intelligence with crimes against humanity and the torture ​and murder of dozens of prisoners held in a Damascus prison under Bashar Assad, a statement said on Monday.
The accused, who was arrested in May and identified only as Fahad A. under German privacy rules, ‌was suspected ‌of working as a ‌guard ⁠in ​a prison ‌in the Syrian capital between the end of April 2011 and mid-April 2012, it said.
“There, he participated in well over 100 interrogations during which prisoners were subjected to severe physical abuse, such ⁠as electric shocks or beatings with cables,” it ‌said.
“On the orders of ‍his superiors, ‍the accused also abused inmates at night, ‍for example by hanging them from the ceiling, dousing them with cold water, or forcing them to remain in uncomfortable positions. ​As a result of such mistreatment and the catastrophic prison conditions, at ⁠least 70 prisoners died.”
German prosecutors have used universal jurisdiction laws that allow them to seek trials for suspects in crimes against humanity committed anywhere in the world.
Based on these laws, several people suspected of war crimes during the Syrian conflict have been arrested in the last few years in Germany, ‌which is home to around one million Syrians.