Cyprus to try Lebanese-Canadian on bomb charges
19 Jun 201518:46 PM
Cyprus to try Lebanese-Canadian on bomb charges
Agence France-Presse
A Lebanese-Canadian will stand trial in Cyprus on terror charges after 8.2 tons of fertilizer that can be used for bomb making was allegedly found in his home, police said Friday.

Authorities believe the man, whose name is being withheld in conformity with the law, has links with the military wing of Hizbullah.

Foreign Minister Ioanis Kasoulides said during a visit to Israel this week that the authorities believe they have thwarted a possible attack on Israeli targets on the island.

Coincidentally, the same day the suspect appeared before a court in the southern coastal city of Larnaca, the town was preparing for a mass wedding ceremony of 70 Israeli couples.

The 26-year-old appeared under heavy guard for a hearing held behind closed doors for "national security reasons."

He will stand trial June 29 on charges including conspiracy to commit a crime, participation in and supporting a terrorist organization plus illegal possession and transfer of explosive materials.

The charge sheet covers a period from 2012 until May 27 of this year, police spokesman Charalambos Zachariou told reporters, with a prosecution line-up of 70 witnesses.

The official Cyprus News Agency said the man has confessed to belonging to Hizbullah but did not divulge what the fertilizer was for or what the possible targets might have been.

Police said the man arrived in Cyprus on May 21 for what he described as a holiday. He was arrested in a Larnaca suburb six days later following a surveillance operation.

Media say the authorities have not ruled out that he was planning an attack on Israeli interests on the island, which attracts thousands of tourists from nearby Israel every year.

Israel also has an embassy in the capital Nicosia.

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