Syria says Assad cousin involved in drug trade arrested in border ambush

FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows the Syrian central bank, after the ousting of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, in Damascus, Syria, December 16, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 21 June 2025
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Syria says Assad cousin involved in drug trade arrested in border ambush

  • An interior ministry statement said that intelligence services and other authorities managed to “lure the criminal Wassim Assad,“
  • He is “considered among the most prominent drug traffickers”

DAMASCUS: Syrian authorities arrested Wassim Assad, a cousin of longtime ruler Bashar Assad, the interior ministry said Saturday, in one of the most high-profile arrests since the former president’s ouster.

Bashar Assad fled to Russia in December with only a handful of confidants, abandoning senior officials and security officers, some of whom have reportedly fled to neighboring countries or taken refuge in the coastal heartland of Assad’s Alawite minority.

An interior ministry statement said that intelligence services and other authorities managed to “lure the criminal Wassim Assad,” carrying out a “well-planned ambush that resulted in his successful arrest.”

He is “considered among the most prominent drug traffickers and people involved in a number of crimes during the period of the former regime,” the statement said, without elaborating on the other allegations against him.

While Wassim Assad did not hold high office, he is the first prominent figure from the Assad family to be arrested since Islamist-led forces toppled the government on December 8, ending five decades of one-family rule.

The US Treasury sanctioned him in 2023, saying he had led a paramilitary unit and was “a key figure in the regional drug trafficking network.”

State news agency SANA, citing an unidentified security source in Homs province, said Wassim
Assad was arrested on the Syria-Lebanon border.

A security source, requesting anonymity, told AFP he was arrested Saturday in the Tal Kalakh area, in Homs province near the frontier.

In recent years, Wassim Assad, who called himself a “customs broker,” posted images of himself on social media near luxury cars, sometimes appearing in military clothing and bearing arms or shooting, at times alongside other armed men.

Since taking power, the new authorities have occasionally announced the arrest of Assad-era security and other officials.

In April, Syrian authorities said security forces had arrested Sultan Al-Tinawi, a former officer in the feared air force intelligence, one of the Assad family’s most trusted security agencies.


Tunisians revive protests in Gabes over pollution from state chemical plant

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Tunisians revive protests in Gabes over pollution from state chemical plant

  • People chanted mainly “Gabes wants to live“
  • The powerful UGTT union has called for a nationwide strike next month

TUNIS: Around 2,500 Tunisians marched through the coastal city of Gabes on Wednesday, reviving protests over pollution from a state-owned phosphate complex amid rising anger over perceived failures to protect public health.
People chanted mainly “Gabes wants to live,” on the 15th anniversary of the start of the 2011 pro-democracy uprising that sparked the Arab Spring movement against autocracy.
The protest added to the pressure on President Kais Saied’s government, which is grappling with a deep financial crisis and growing street unrest, protests by doctors, journalists, banks and public transport systems.
The powerful UGTT union has called for a nationwide strike next month, signalling great tension in the country. The recent protests are widely seen as one of the biggest challenges facing Saied since he began ruling by decree in 2021.
Protesters chanted slogans such as “We want to live” and “People want to dismantle polluting units,” as they marched toward Chatt Essalam, a coastal suburb north of the city where the Chemical Group’s industrial units are located.
“The chemical plant is a fully fledged crime... We refuse to pass on an environmental disaster to our children, and we are determined to stick to our demand,” said Safouan Kbibieh, a local environmental activist.
Residents say toxic emissions from the phosphate complex have led to higher rates of respiratory illnesses, osteoporosis and cancer, while industrial waste continues to be discharged into the sea, damaging marine life and livelihoods.
The protests in Gabes were reignited after hundreds of schoolchildren suffered breathing difficulties in recent months, allegedly caused by toxic fumes from a plant converting phosphates into phosphoric acid and fertilizers.
In October, Saied described the situation in Gabes as an “environmental assassination”, blaming policy choices made by previous governments, and has called for urgent maintenance to prevent toxic leaks.
The protesters reject the temporary measures and are demanding the permanent closure and relocation of the plant.