Mohammad El Halabi

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Born1978 (age 4748)
Jabalia Camp, Gaza Strip
OccupationAid worker
Criminal statusConvicted
Mohammed El Halabi
Born1978 (age 4748)
Jabalia Camp, Gaza Strip
Alma materIslamic University of Gaza
OccupationAid worker
Criminal statusConvicted
Criminal chargeDiverting of charitable funds to a terrorist organization
PenaltySentenced to 12 years imprisonment

Mohammad El Halabi (born 1978) is a Palestinian aid worker and former manager for World Vision International in Palestine who was convicted of diverting funds to Hamas.

In June 2022, he was found guilty of membership of a terrorist organization, financing terrorist activities, transmitting information to an enemy entity, and criminal possession of a weapon. Significant controversy has been raised over the nature and validity of his convictions due to, in part, the use of secret evidence in the ruling.[1]

Independent auditors and the Australian government have found "no evidence of wrongdoing or diversion of funds" from World Vision, which has stated that it would appeal.[2]

Halabi was born in 1978 in the Jabalia refugee camp which his family had fled to from their village 15 miles to the north during the 1947–1949 Palestine war. Halabi’s father Khalil worked closely with UNRWA's director for Gaza, attending meetings with the likes of Tony Blair and John Kerry.[3]

Halabi studied engineering at the Islamic University of Gaza, the foremost engineering university in Gaza, where he was a member of the Fatah club. The wider Halabi family had a history of opposition to Hamas, and Halabi's younger brother, Hamed, once turned up to an interview with The Guardian with a head injury that he said was from participating in one of the rare demonstrations in Gaza against Hamas rule.[3]

In 2003, Halabi married his wife Ola, with whom he has five children. In 2004, in response to the declining conditions in Gaza, Halabi swapped his engineering career for aid work.[3]

Detention and trial

Halabi was arrested on June 15 of 2016 at the Erez Crossing under suspicion by Israel's Shin Bet intelligence agency that Halabi had siphoned off $48 million in funds from the budget of World Vision, of which he was a program manager, to Hamas over the course of six years.[4][5][6]

After his arrest, Halabi's lawyer, Muhammad Mahmoud, stated that his client has nothing to do with Hamas and that the fact that the investigation had lasted 55 days proved that there were problems with the evidence.[4] On 4 August, three weeks after the raid, Halabi confessed to an undercover informer that he had been diverting funds to Hamas, but his lawyer has claimed that he may have made the statement under duress in the form of beating by interrogators, treatment which the UN has said “may amount to torture”.[3]

World Vision denied the allegations of financial irregularity, stating that all of its operations were properly overseen and audited. Speaking in 2016, Tim Costello, chief executive of World Vision Australia, decried the charges, citing a mismatch between Shin Bet's claims and the NGO's total budget in the area, noting that: "What we know is our total operating budget in Gaza for the past 10 years was approximately $22.5 million, and yet the figures being circulated are up to $50 million has been diverted from him."[7] The NGO further claimed that before 2014, El Halabi's managerial level would have capped his signing authority at $15,000 according to the organization's accountability processes.[7]

Verdict

On 15 June 2022, Halabi was found guilty of "membership of a terrorist organisation, financing terrorist activities, having "transmitted information to the enemy" and "possession of a weapon". World Vision said there would be an appeal. Independent auditors and the Australian government found "no evidence of wrongdoing or diversion of funds."[2]

The court's decision "did not describe the diversion of any financial aid to Hamas", but rejected World Vision's assertion of strong controls over its own finances. The court also considered "secret evidence" including an alleged confession based on the testimony of another prisoner that was obtained under duress, according to Halabi's lawyer.[2]

In late August 2022 he was convicted and sentenced to 12 years in prison.[8]

Controversy

References

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