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French top court upholds prison sentence of Bashar al-Assad's uncle

France's top administrative court on Wednesday confirmed the conviction of Rifaat al-Assad, uncle of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, in an "ill-gotten gains" case over wealth estimated at 90 million euros ($89 million). Rifaat al-Assad, 85, is the younger brother of Bashar's father and former Syrian dictator Hafez al-Assad, and himself held the office of vice president but fled the country in 1984 after a failed coup.

Reuters WORLD
Published September 07,2022
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France's highest court on Wednesday sealed a ruling that found Rifaat al-Assad, an uncle of Syrian regime leader Bashar al-Assad, was guilty of acquiring millions of euros' worth of French property using funds diverted from the Syrian state.

The verdict by the Cour de Cassation, which comes at the end of a long process in which al-Assad has raised various appeals, confirmed a four-year prison sentence handed on Rifaat al-Assad, who had returned to Syria last year after losing access to his French wealth.

"The assets held by Rifaat al-Assad in France seized during the proceedings will be definitively confiscated", said Sherpa, a France-based group of human rights lawyers whose criminal complaint in 2013 triggered the proceedings.

Assad, 85, had lived in exile, mostly in France, since the mid-1980s, after being accused of trying to seize power from his brother, then-President Hafez al-Assad, Bashar's father.

He returned to his country of birth in October after he lost access to his wealth in France.

Assad previously commanded troops accused of killing thousands of people to crush an uprising in 1982.

French judicial authorities suspected him of having unduly acquired real estate in several countries between 1984 and 2016 with funds from Syria. He repeatedly denied the allegations and said he acquired his wealth as a gift from the Saudi king.