Algerian Saber Lahmar will be tried in mid-May on charges of inciting people to “jihadist actions” in Syria and Iraq, AFP reported.
Lahmar was detained at Guantanamo for eight years until he was acquitted and moved to Paris in 2009.
Lahmar arrived in France on December 1, 2009, after the American judiciary acquitted him and subsequently French President Nicolas Sarkozy agreed to send him to France with another former detainee, Lakhdar Boumediene.
Lahmar, who took over the imam at a mosque in the southwestern part of the country in France, but soon afterward “attacked Jews, called for the killing of Muslims” in his sermons.son He was accused of “Islamic extremism” for “extremely harsh attitudes.” For apostates and martyrdom.”
Lahmar was accused of affiliation with several “jihadist figures” in France, including Tunisian Taoufik Bousdra, who was convicted in 2011 of financing al-Qaeda, Lionel Dumont, an al-Qaeda cell member, and Mohammed al-Shamlan. Leader of the predecessor group “Forsan al-Ezza”.
Lahmar was also accused of “directly preparing and inciting” to “go to the Iraq-Syria region” in 2015.
Source: “AFP”
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