Nizar Trabelsi | |
Fullname: | Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi |
Birth Date: | 2 July 1970 |
Position: | Midfielder |
Years1: | 1989–1990 |
Caps1: | 1 |
Goals1: | 1 |
Years2: | 1992 |
Years3: | 1992 |
Clubs3: | 1. FC Wülfrath |
Years4: | 1993 |
Clubs4: | SV 09/35 Wermelskirchen |
Years5: | 1993–1994 |
Clubs5: | VfR Neuss |
Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi (born 2 July 1970) is a Tunisian former professional footballer. In 2003, he was convicted as terrorist and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment for his association with Al-Qaida, and for plotting to attack US targets including American soldiers stationed at the Belgian airbase Kleine Brogel Air Base.
Trabelsi played in Germany for Fortuna Düsseldorf, Wuppertaler SV, 1. FC Wülfrath, SV 09/35 Wermelskirchen and VfR Neuss, as a midfielder.[1]
Trabelsi had traveled to Afghanistan and met Osama bin Laden on several occasions. In 2001, Trabelsi was suspected of plotting to attack a US embassy in Paris, which was uncovered and stopped.[2] He is said to be the designated suicide bomber, and was to wear a business suit to conceal the strapped bomb onto himself before walking into the embassy.[3]
Trabelsi was arrested in an apartment, in Uccle near Brussels, Belgium on 13 September 2001. He was also implicated by Briton Saajid Badat, who alleged that both of them had conspired with Richard Reid supposedly to blow up two US-bound airliners using shoe bombs simultaneously.
In 2003, Trabelsi was sentenced to a ten-year prison term in Belgium,[2] for plotting to attack the Kleine Brogel Air Base.[4] He was also found guilty of illegal weapons possession and being a member in a private militia. On 3 October 2013, he was extradited to the United States.[5] In September 2014, the European Court of Human Rights found that his deportation was performed in violation of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights and ordered Belgium to pay 60,000 euros in damages to Trabelsi.[6] [7]
Trabelsi was extradited to the United States in October 2013, after he completed his sentence in Belgium.
, he remained in jail in solitary confinement, in Washington D.C., awaiting trial.[8] On 14 July, 2023, he was found not guilty in an American federal court. Despite the outcome of this trial, Trabelsi remains to be held in jail, also in solitary confinement, in what he calls "a black hole". The cell measures 3.5 by 3.5 meters, the light is burning constantly, and he is only allowed to leave the cell for one hour per day. The European Court of Human Rights has on multiple occasions convicted the governments of Belgium for the circumstances Trabelsi is living in since his deportation. As a consequence of these rulings, national courts in Brussels have demanded for Trabelsi to be extradited back to Belgium, with a penalty for the federal government of Belgium of up to €200.000 if this demand is not met.[9] [10]