RCMP Arrest Alleged Paris Synagogue Bomber [on Hassan Diab]

An Ottawa university instructor has been arrested for the infamous terrorist bombing of a Paris synagogue in 1980 that killed four people, injured scores of others and put synagogues around the world on a tough new security footing.

Hassan Diab, 54, was arrested by the RCMP in Gatineau, Que., Thursday morning. He was placed in custody at the RCMP’s A division in Ottawa, said his lawyer, René Duval.

The RCMP would not confirm the identity of the person they arrested, but a Justice Department official confirmed it to be Mr. Diab. He is to appear in an Ottawa court on Friday.

Two French judges reportedly issued an international arrest warrant against Mr. Diab earlier this month, believed to be the first such international warrant for terrorism ever executed in Canada.

The Oct. 3, 1980, bombing of central Paris’s Copernic Road synagogue was triggered by high explosives planted in the saddlebags of a motorcycle parked outside the building. The blast killed three Frenchmen and a young Israeli woman. Hundreds of worshippers gathered inside the synagogue for a Sabbath service were to emerge minutes later.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-Special Operations was blamed.

As one of the first contemporary terrorist strikes on a synagogue outside the Middle East, the blast triggered the fortification of Jewish sites across Europe and North America.

France’s Le Figaro newspaper, quoting unnamed sources, reported last fall that French authorities suspect Mr. Diab was the leader of the small commando team responsible for the attack and had asked Canada for assistance with their investigation.

The French magazine L’Express reported on Thursday that a team of French police, magistrates and intelligence officers had been in Canada working on the case and would try to arrange Mr. Diab’s extradition to France. The French arrest warrant executed on Thursday accuses him of making and planting the bomb, according to the Reuters news agency.

Soon after details of the French authorities’ interest in him were reported in October of last year, Mr. Diab issued a statement to the Ottawa Citizen through his lawyer, stating he had no involvement in the bombing, no criminal record, was never a member of the Palestinian group and did not know anyone associated with the group.

Nor, he said, has he been active with any other militant organizations.

Though he visited a cousin in Paris roughly a year or two after the explosion, he only learned of the bombing when a Le Figaro reporter approached him last fall at the University of Ottawa, where he is a part-time sociology and anthropology instructor teaching one bachelor of arts-level class.

Married with two grown children from a previous marriage, his lawyer said he also teaches part-time at Carleton University.

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