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.


Libya says UK to analyze black box from crash that killed general

Turkish soldier patrols as search and rescue operations continue at the wreckage site.
Updated 01 January 2026
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Libya says UK to analyze black box from crash that killed general

  • General Mohammed Al-Haddad and 4 aides died after visit to Ankara, with Turkish officials saying electrical failure caused the Falcon 50 jet to crash shortly after takeoff

TRIPOLI: Libya said on Thursday that Britain had agreed to analyze the black box from a plane crash in Turkiye on December 23 that killed a Libyan military delegation, including the head of its army.
General Mohammed Al-Haddad and four aides died after a visit to Ankara, with Turkish officials saying an electrical failure caused their Falcon 50 jet to crash shortly after takeoff.
Three crew members, two of them French, were also killed.
The aircraft’s black box flight recorder was found on farmland near the crash site.
“We coordinated directly with Britain for the analysis” of the black box, Mohamed Al-Chahoubi, transport minister in the Government of National Unity (GNU), said at a press conference in Tripoli.
General Haddad was very popular in Libya despite deep divisions between west and east.
The North African country has been split since a NATO-backed revolt toppled and killed longtime leader Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.
Haddad was chief of staff for the internationally recognized GNU, which controls the west. The east is run by military ruler Khalifa Haftar.
Chahoubi told AFP a request for the analysis was “made to Germany, which demanded France’s assistance” to examine the aircraft’s flight recorders.
“However, the Chicago Convention stipulates that the country analizing the black box must be neutral,” he said.
“Since France is a manufacturer of the aircraft and the crew was French, it is not qualified to participate. The United Kingdom, on the other hand, was accepted by Libya and Turkiye.”
After meeting the British ambassador to Tripoli on Tuesday, Foreign Minister Taher Al-Baour said a joint request had been submitted by Libya and Turkiye to Britain “to obtain technical and legal support for the analysis of the black box.”
Chahoubi told Thursday’s press briefing that Britain “announced its agreement, in coordination with the Libyan Ministry of Transport and the Turkish authorities.”
He said it was not yet possible to say how long it would take to retrieve the flight data, as this depended on the state of the black box.
“The findings will be made public once they are known,” Chahoubi said, warning against “false information” and urging the public not to pay attention to rumors.