French court orders release of Lebanese terrorist who killed Israeli, US diplomats

Prosecutors appeal ruling to free Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, who is serving life for 1982 killing of US military attaché Charles Robert Ray and Israeli diplomat Yacov Barsimantov

Lebanese terrorist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah sits during his trial, for being an accomplice in the murder of two diplomats including Charles Ray of the US and Israeli Yacov Barsimantov, for which Abdallah was condemned to life prison, at the courthouse of Lyon, central eastern France, on July 3, 1986. (Photo by AFP)
Lebanese terrorist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah sits during his trial, for being an accomplice in the murder of two diplomats including Charles Ray of the US and Israeli Yacov Barsimantov, for which Abdallah was condemned to life prison, at the courthouse of Lyon, central eastern France, on July 3, 1986. (Photo by AFP)

PARIS — A French court on Friday ordered the release of pro-Palestinian Lebanese terrorist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, jailed for 40 years for the 1982 killings of two foreign diplomats, prosecutors said.

The court said Abdallah, first detained in 1984 and convicted in 1987 over the murders, would be released on December 6 provided he leaves France, French anti-terror prosecutors said in a statement to AFP, adding that they would appeal.

“In (a) decision dated today, the court granted Georges Ibrahim Abdallah conditional release from December 6, subject to the condition that he leaves French territory and not appear there again,” the prosecutors said.

But his release remains conditional on the outcome of the appeal by prosecutors, to be heard at a hearing on a date yet to be set.

Abdallah, a former member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), was sentenced to life in prison for his involvement in the murders of US military attaché Charles Robert Ray and Israeli diplomat Yacov Barsimantov.

Barsimantov’s killer, a woman wearing a white beret, fled into the Paris subway after shooting him in the head in front of his wife and children at their apartment building. The diplomat was the second secretary for political affairs at the embassy.

Yacov Barsimatov (courtesy)

Abdallah shot Ray, an assistant military attaché, outside Ray’s apartment building the same year.

Washington, a civil party to the case, has consistently opposed his release but Lebanese authorities have repeatedly said he should be freed from jail.

This was Abdallah’s 11th bid for release.

Abdallah, now 73, had been eligible to apply for parole since 1999 but all previous applications had been turned down, except in 2013 when he was granted release on the condition he was expelled from France.

However, the then-interior minister Manuel Valls refused to go through with the order and Abdallah remained in jail.

The court’s decision on Friday is not conditional on the government issuing such an order, Abdallah’s lawyer, Jean-Louis Chalanset, told AFP, hailing “a legal and a political victory”.

“It’s not surprising that the prosecution is appealing, since they want him to die in prison,” he added.

One of France’s longest-serving inmates, Abdallah has never expressed regret for his actions, claiming he was a fighter” and not a “criminal”

Wounded in 1978 during Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, he joined the Marxist-Leninist PFLP, which carried out a string of plane hijackings in the 1960s and 1970s. It is banned as a terror group by the US and EU.

Then in the late 1970s Abdallah, a Christian, founded his own terror group, the Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions (LARF). It made contact with other extreme-left outfits including Italy’s Red Brigades and the German Red Army Faction (RAF).

People holding Palestinian flags take part in a demonstration outside the Lannemezan prison to call for the release of Lebanese national Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, founder of the Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions (LARF) and former PFLP member jailed for life in 1987 for complicity in the killing of US and Israeli diplomats in 1982, in Lannemezan, south-western France, on October 26, 2024. (Photo by Valentine CHAPUIS / AFP)

A pro-Syrian and anti-Israeli Marxist group, the LARF claimed four deadly attacks in France in the 1980s. Abdallah was arrested in 1984 after entering a police station in Lyon and claiming Mossad assassins were on his trail.

At his trial over the killing of the diplomats, Abdallah was sentenced to life in prison, a much more severe punishment than the 10 years prosecutors had called for.

His lawyer Jacques Verges, who defended clients including notorious Venezuelan terrorist Carlos the Jackal, described the verdict as a “declaration of war.”

There remains a broad swell of support for his cause among the far left and communists in France. Last month, 2022 Nobel Literature Prize winner Annie Ernaux said in a piece in the communist daily L’Humanite that his detention “shamed France.”

On Thursday, around 200 people gathered ahead of the ruling in the southwestern city of Toulouse, 120 kilometers (75 miles) from the Lannemezan prison in the French Pyrenees where Abdallah is held.

On 26 October, a much larger demonstration of 2,000 people was held outside the prison to mark the 40th anniversary of his arrest.

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