Two members of Hezbollah in Germany sentenced to jail

One of the two defendants (L) and his lawyers Thomas Domanski (R) and Felix Deutscher await the start of the trial in the courtroom in the criminal justice building. A German court has sentenced two men to several years in prison in the first trial of members of the Lebanese Islamist movement Hezbollah in Germany. Christian Charisius/dpa-Pool/dpa

A German court has sentenced two men to several years in prison in the first trial of members of the Lebanese Islamist movement Hezbollah in Germany.

Judge Petra Wende-Spors from the Hanseatic Higher Regional Court in Hamburg said that it had been proved in court that Hezbollah was a terrorist organization abroad in the criminal sense, and that the two defendants were members of this organization. "The answer to both questions is a crystal-clear yes," said the judge.

A 50-year-old Lebanese man was sentenced to five and a half years in prison, and the second defendant, a 56-year-old German-Lebanese man, to three years. They can appeal.

The two defendants were detained on May 10 last year. The 50-year-old had regularly appeared as a preacher and "travelling sheikh," for example at the al-Mustafa community in Bremen, which was banned in 2022.

According to the court, the 56-year-old was also active as a foreign functionary of Hezbollah. From 2009, he was a member and from 2012 chairman of the al-Mustafa community.

Hezbollah, literally "party of God" in Arabic, has been banned from operating in Germany since April 2020.

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