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US charges Colombian-Lebanese Hezbollah member in Argentina bombing

The US alleged Samuel Salman El Reda helped Hezbollah perpetrate the deadly 1994 attack against a Jewish community center in the Argentinian capital, following sanctions related to the attack earlier this year.
Activists take part in a ceremony marking the second anniversary of the controversial death of Argentinian prosecutor Alberto Nisman on January 18, 2017 in Buenos Aires. Nisman died in mysterious circumstances in January 18, 2015, after accusing Argentina's then president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, of obstructing his investigation of a 1994 bombing at a Buenos Aires Jewish center. / AFP / EITAN ABRAMOVICH (Photo credit should read EITAN ABRAMOVICH/AFP via Getty Images)

US federal prosecutors announced on Wednesday charges against a Lebanese-Colombian citizen, accusing him of working with Hezbollah in the deadly 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center in Argentina.

Samuel Salman El Reda received a number of terrorism charges. According to the US Attorney’s Office in New York City, Reda allegedly joined Hezbollah in or around 1993 and developed connections to Iranian diplomat Mohsen Rabbani and Lebanese alleged Hezbollah operative Assad Ahmad Barakat. In 1994, Reda allegedly “helped Hezbollah plan and execute” the bombing of the Argentine Israeli Mutual Association in Buenos Aires.

The Argentine Israeli Mutual Association is a Jewish community center in the Argentine capital city. A suicide bomber drove a bomb-laden van into the center, killing 85 people and injuring hundreds. The US and Argentina have both long accused Hezbollah and its primary supporter, Iran, of involvement in the attack, charges both deny.

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