Wanted Hezbollah commander killed in Syria
AFP, Tuesday 27 May 2014


A senior Hezbollah commander branded by the FBI as one of the world's most wanted terrorists was killed fighting in Syria, residents of his village in southern Lebanon told AFP Tuesday.

Powerful Shiite movement Hezbollah has deployed thousands of fighters into neighbouring Syria to back President Bashar al-Assad's army as he battles insurgents who have been trying to overthrow him for the past three years.

"Fawzi Ayoub was killed fighting in Syria. His funeral was held in (his home village of) Ain Qana yesterday (Monday). Many people came to the funeral, to give their condolences to his family," a resident of the village said on condition of anonymity.

According to another resident of Ain Qana, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) southeast of Beirut, "Ayoub was a leading Hezbollah commander in the Aleppo area" in northern Syria.

The FBI's website says Ayoub was indicted in the United States in 2009 for "wilfully and knowingly" trying to enter Israel, Hezbollah's arch-enemy, with a fake US passport "for the purpose of conducting a bombing."

Ayoub, who had lived in Canada, was arrested in Israel in 2000. He was released three years later in a prisoner swap with Hezbollah.

Another Hezbollah member suspected of trying to assassinate a Lebanese MP in 2012 was killed fighting in Syria in a separate incident, residents of his village of Adsheet, also in southern Lebanon, told AFP.

"Mahmud Hayek, who had been accused of trying to assassinate Boutros Harb, was killed while fighting in Syria," said a resident speaking on condition of anonymity.

A website based in the Nabatiyeh region, where Adsheet is located, published a homage to Hayek on Monday, accompanied with two photographs of him smiling.

Judicial sources say Hayek was being tried in absentia in a Lebanese military court over a failed assassination bid against MP Boutros Harb, a member of Lebanon's anti-Damascus opposition.

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