Habib Shartouni

Habib Tanious Shartouni (born 24 April 1958) (Arabic: حبيب الشرتوني) is a convicted assassin of the Lebanese president-elect Bachir Gemayel.[1]

Habib Tanious Shartouni
حبيب الشرتوني
Born (1958-04-24) 24 April 1958
Chartoun, Mount Lebanon, Lebanon.
NationalityLebanese
Criminal charge(s)Assassination of President-elect Bachir Gemayel

Early life

Habib Tanious Shartouni, a Maronite Christian, was born in a small village called (Arabic: شرتون) Chartoun in Aley, Mount Lebanon. In the early 1970s, only a few years before the outbreak of the civil war, he was inspired and became affiliated with the Syrian Social Nationalist Party (SSNP). When the Lebanese Civil War broke out, he volunteered to serve in one of the SSNP stations in Aley.[2]

A few months later, he was advised by his parents to flee from Lebanon to Cyprus then to France where he attended a university in Paris and obtained a degree in business. He had spent his first year in Paris away from politics, until the late summer of 1977 during which he officially joined the SSNP upon his first visit to Lebanon and became an active member ever since.[3]

Upon his return to France, he carried all the necessary contacts pertaining to the party's delegates in Paris and started attending some of their secret meetings, wherein he met Nabil Alam, the chief of interior of the party at the time. Alam made a significant impression on Shartouni, which paved the way for Bachir's assassination.

Assassination of Gemayel

After completing his studies in Paris, he returned to Lebanon and became very close to Nabil Alam, who planned with the assassination of Bachir Gemayel, knowing that Shartouni used to live on the third floor of the building where the Kataeb headquarters was located.

Subsequently, he was advised by Alam to carry the explosives from his place in West Beirut to the other end in Achrafieh, in the eastern side of the city, above the Kataeb headquarters. After he had carried all the necessary explosives, he received the detonator from Alam and managed to carry it safely to his aunt's place in Achrafieh, a few miles away from his place.

Shartouni had made up his mind to carry out the operation. On the night of 13 September 1982, he sneaked onto the second floor of the building housing the Kataeb Party Office in Achrafieh. His behaviour did not arouse suspicion since he lived on the third floor of the same building with his sister and grandparents. He got into the room above the platform on which Bachir and his companions would be seated and stashed about 40 to 50 kg of high explosives.

The next afternoon Shartouni remained, where Bachir was supposed to deliver a speech to greet his old companions, until he made sure Bachir had arrived. He walked out of the building and ran to the sector of Nasra, where he had kept the detonator. Ten minutes after Bachir had started his speech, Habib pressed the detonator. The sound of the explosion was heard all over Beirut. Immediately after the blast he walked back to the premises to check the result.

Arrest and imprisonment

Two days later Shartouni was arrested by the Lebanese Forces.[4]

Shartouni was handed over to Lebanese justice. Amine Gemayel, Bachir's elder brother, succeeded him to the presidency seat after his assassination. Habib had spent eight years held captive in Roumieh prison without an official trial, until 13 October 1990 when he escaped during the final Syrian offensive in Lebanon that was aimed at toppling the government headed by Michel Aoun.[5] Shartouni was sentenced to death by the Lebanese court on 20 October 2017.

Trial

On 20 October 2017, the Judicial Council, Lebanon's highest state security court, sentenced Habib Shartouni and Nabil al-Alam to death in absentia in the case of the 1982 assassination of President-elect Bashir Gemayel. The Council also stripped former Syrian Social National Party members Shartouni and Alam of their civil rights.[6]

gollark: Abby when anyone writes programs which are not perfect beacons of elegance which also implement a Turing-complete functional language
gollark: That would defeat the point of them being UUIDs.
gollark: This is the internet. You can interact with basically anyone! Although they might ignore you, especially if they have a high volume of communication anyway.
gollark: Yes, sometimes people who do things can in fact be interacted with.
gollark: There's CC: Tweaked, even if CC *itself* is dead.

References

  1. Katz, Mayn (2005). Song of Spies. Variocity. pp. 128–129. ISBN 978-1-933037-73-8.
  2. "Habib al-Shartouni: Striking the Head of Collaboration". Al Akhbar English. 2012-07-23. Archived from the original on 2018-04-13. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
  3. O'Brien, Conor Cruise (1986). The Siege: The Saga of Israel and Zionism. Simon and Schuster. p. 629. ISBN 978-0-671-60044-0.
  4. "Report Links Suspect in Gemayel Slaying to Syria". Los Angeles Times. 1982-10-03. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
  5. "Naharnet — Lebanon's leading news destination". Naharnet.com. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
  6. {{cite web|url'http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/237054-shartouni-alam-sentenced-to-death-over-bashir-gemayel-assassination OpenDocument |title=Naharnet — Lebanon's leading news destination |website=Naharnet.com |date|accessdate=2017-10-20}}}
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.