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GFATF LLL Hassan Izz-al-Din

Hassan Izz-al-Din

Terror organization: Hezbollah


Status: For decades there is no information about him. He used to be an operative of Hezbollah. He’s been wanted for his role in the 1985 hijacking of TWA Flight 847.


Role: On June 14, 1985, terrorists hijacked TWA Flight 847 during a flight from Athens to Rome. Over 17 days, the plane was forced to crisscross the Mediterranean with 153 passengers and crew members, from Beirut to Algiers and back again, landing in Beirut three times. During the first stop in Beirut, the hijackers severely beat, and then shot and killed, U.S. Navy diver Robert Stethem.

Izz al Din was not only one of the hijackers, but one of the masterminds behind this hijack.

Izz-al-Din is on the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists List.


Location: Lebanon (estimation).


Also Known As: Ahmed Garbaya; Samir Salwwan; Nikolay Kalpakov; Sa-id;


Date of Birth: 1963;


Location: Lebanon;


Address: Beirut, Lebanon;


Activities:
The Rewards For Justice Program, United States Department of State, is offering a reward of up to $5 million for information leading directly to the apprehension or conviction of Hasan Izz-Al-Din.

Izz-Al-Din is an alleged member of the terrorist organization, Lebanese Hizballah. He is thought to be in Lebanon.

Hasan Izz-Al-Din was indicted for his role in planning and participating in the June 14, 1985, hijacking of a commercial airliner which resulted in the assault on various passengers and crew members, and the murder of one United States citizen.

On June 14, 1985, TWA Flight 847 was hijacked by Mohammed Ali Hamadei and a second terrorist brandishing grenades and pistols during a routine flight from Athens to Rome.

Over a horrific 17 days, TWA pilot John Testrake was forced to crisscross the Mediterranean with his 153 passengers and crew members, from Beirut to Algiers and back again, landing in Beirut three times before he was finally allowed to stop. The terrorists had tied passengers up and were beating them, threatening to kill them unless hundreds of Lebanese were released from Israeli prisons.

It was on June 15, during the first stop in Beirut, that 23-year-old Robert Stethem of Waldorf, Maryland—a U.S. Navy diver—was severely beaten by Hamadei and his accomplice, was dragged to the opened aircraft door, was shot point blank in the head, and was thrown onto the tarmac of Beirut airport.

Hamadei and two of his collaborators—Hasan Izz-Al-Din and Ali Atwa—are at large. Mohammed Ali Hamadei (aka Ali Hamadi and Castro) is a Lebanese citizen with black hair and dark brown eyes, weighs 150 pounds, and has a mole on his right cheek below the eye. An alleged member of the terrorist organization Hizballah, Hamadei is believed to be living in Lebanon.

Hamadei was indicted on November 14, 1985, Interpol Red Notice Control Number A-562/12-1985, reference #19890604066, and a reward of $250,000 each was offered for information leading to his and his accomplices’ arrests and convictions. He was arrested in the Frankfurt airport on January 13, 1987, carrying explosives in his luggage.

The U.S. sought extradition, but the Federal Republic of Germany decided to prosecute Hamadei in Germany and, on May 17, 1989, convicted him of murder, hostage taking, assault, and hijacking. Hamadei was sentenced to life in prison. On December 15, 2005, however, he was released from custody and returned to Beirut, Lebanon, on December 16, 2005.

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