PARIS, May 20 — France’s highest court on Wednesday upheld an order that a Lebanese-Canadian academic, who has spent years fighting claims of involvement in the bombing of a Paris synagogue, stand trial four decades after the attack.

Four people were killed and 46 injured in the October 3, 1980, attack on a synagogue on Copernic street in Paris — the first fatal attack on Jews in France since the Nazi occupation in World War II.

Hassan Diab, 67, is accused of planting the bomb. He has always denied any involvement.

He was extradited from Canada to France in 2014, but was released in 2018 and returned to Canada after French magistrates said the evidence against him was “not convincing enough” to hold him.

Advertisement

In a stunning about-turn in January 2021, the Paris appeals court overturned the decision to dismiss the case and ordered he stand trial.

Diab fought the decision to the Court of Cassation, France’s court of final appeal, which on Wednesday upheld the decision not to dismiss the case.

‘Parody of justice’ -

Advertisement

In a statement Wednesday, Diab’s Canadian lawyer, Don Bayne, called the ruling “a parody of justice” saying it showed “how political pressure is outweighing justice.

At a news conference last week in Ottawa, Bayne and a group of human rights NGOs had called on Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to commit to not sending Diab back to France.

A former professor of sociology at the University of Ottawa, Diab is accused of planting explosives inside the saddle bag of a motorbike that exploded outside the synagogue close to the Champs-Elysees, where hundreds had gathered for Sabbath prayers.

Investigators blamed the attack on the Special Operations branch of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).

Diab said he was taking exams in Beirut at the time. 

He spent a total of nine years either in jail or under strict bail conditions in Canada and France, awaiting trial.

After his release from French detention in 2018 he sued the Canadian government for extraditing him.

Evidence presented against him in France included a sketch of the bomber that resembled him and the discovery of a passport in his name with entry and exit stamps from Spain, where the bomber is believed to have fled.

French prosecutors admit to having “doubts” as to Diab’s whereabouts at the time of the bombing but insist that a trial be held to consider all the evidence. — AFP