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Conflict Incident Report

Authorities detain suspect linked to Lebanon terror attack

Date of incident: 
April 4, 2017
Death toll: 
0persons
Number of Injured: 
0persons
Actors/Parties Involved: 
General Security

General Security arrested a man suspected of involvement in a terror attack carried out in Lebanon, a security source told The Daily Star.

The source said that J.M., also known as Abu Amir, was arrested in the Beddawi neighborhood in the northern city of Tripoli.

No further information was available.

Meanwhile, State Security agents arrested a Palestinian in south Lebanon on charges of contacting extremist groups, a source told The Daily Star.

The source said that the Palestinian, identified as Aa.Aa., was arrested in the Sitt Nafisa neighborhood in the southern city of Sidon.

The state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported that State Security also arrested two Syrians in the Bekaa towns of Deir al-Ahmar and Btedaai who admitted to being part of Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, formerly al-Qaeda affiliated Nusra Front.

The two arrested Syrians, Aa.R. and N.R., also admitted to fighting alongside militant groups on the outskirts of Lebanon’s eastern mountain range, the latter, known as "al-Wahesh,” holding a higher rank in Jabhat Fatah al-Sham.

Separately, a Lebanese judge Tuesday charged two unidentified suspects with belonging to Daesh (ISIS), state media also reported.

State Prosecutor Judge Saqr Saqr charged the two with seeking to join the ranks of the extremist group abroad.

The case was referred to Military Investigative Judge Riad Abu Ghaida.

The army and security forces have been cracking down on sleeper cells as part of a comprehensive security plan since the northeastern border town of Arsal in the Bekaa Valley was briefly overrun by extremists in 2014.

Primary category: 
Arrest/Detention
Classification of conflict (primary): 
Power & governance conflicts
Violent or non-violent conflicts associated with antagonisms related to internal political tensions between local and/or national groups and parties. These tensions may be encouraged by internal, regional and international parties. Such conflicts are characterized by their defiance and/or opposition to central State power and governance.