Hezbollah trader's killing sparks Israeli operation allegations
Municipal police officers patrol outside a villa where the Lebanese money changer Mohammad Srour, 57, was found tortured and killed in the Monte Verdi neighborhood, Beit Meri, Lebanon, April 16, 2024. (AP Photo)


Lebanon's interior minister asserted on Wednesday that the abduction and killing of a Hezbollah-affiliated Lebanese currency trader in a villa on the outskirts of a serene mountain resort town earlier this month was likely orchestrated by Israeli intelligence operatives.

The assassination of Mohammad Srour, 57, who was sanctioned by the U.S., resembled a scene from an international espionage thriller.

According to Interior Minister Bassam Mawlawi in an interview with The Associated Press (AP), pistols equipped with silencers and gloves were discovered in a bucket of water at the crime scene, alongside chemicals seemingly intended to erase fingerprints and other evidence.

Thousands of dollars in cash were left strewn around Srour's body, seemingly to dispel any notion of robbery as the motive.

"Lebanese security agencies have suspicion or accusations that Mossad was behind this operation," Mawlawi said, referring to the Israeli spy agency. "The way the crime was carried out led to this suspicion."

Mawlawi said the investigation is still ongoing and once it's over, the results will be made public and referred to judicial authorities.

Israel has a long history of targeted killings in Lebanon, including drone strikes that have killed high-ranking Hezbollah commanders over the past six months.

At least 260 Hezbollah members have been killed by Israel in that period.

The Israeli prime minister’s office, which oversees Mossad, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The suspicion by Lebanon’s security agencies that the crime could be the work of Israeli agents comes at a time when Lebanon’s southern border region has been rocked by ongoing clashes between Hezbollah and Israeli troops.

The U.S. Treasury sanctioned Srour in 2019 over his alleged money transfers from Iran through Hezbollah to the Palestinian group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

"Mohammad Srour’s activity in money exchange is known, as are the transfers of money from which side to which side," Mawlawi said.

Srour’s killing earlier this month came as U.S. and Israeli officials have been trying to crack down on transfers of funds to Hamas.

The push intensified following the Oct. 7 Hamas incursion on southern Israel that triggered the devastating war in Gaza and its ripple effects around the region.

Last month, a senior U.S. Treasury official visiting Beirut pressed Lebanese authorities to prevent funds from being funneled to Hamas through the country.

Jesse Baker, deputy assistant secretary of the Treasury for Asia and the Middle East in the Office of Terrorist Financing and Financial Crimes, met with top Lebanese political and financial officials.

Israel's military said it has killed a number of money exchangers in Gaza for allegedly funding Hamas.

Srour’s killing was clearly planned in advance. Three Lebanese judicial officials familiar with the investigation told the AP that a man posing as a customer had contacted Srour from abroad and asked him to deliver a cash transfer to a woman in the mountain resort of Beit Meri.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing, said Srour first went with his nephew and left after handing the woman the money.

He was contacted by the same person with another request a day after his first visit, the officials said. This time he went alone, after which his family lost contact with him.

Mawlawi said the cellphone the woman used to get in touch with Srour was only activated to contact him.

He said the perpetrators had first tried to rent an apartment in Beirut’s southeastern suburb of Hazmieh, a detail that has not been previously reported, but they later canceled, apparently because "they did not find (the apartment) suitable to carry out the operation."

Mawlawi said the killers then shifted to the quiet town of Beit Meri, famous for its posh homes with red-brick roofs, sprawling forest and Roman-era archaeological site, where they rented a three-story villa on the edge of the town using fake Lebanese identity cards.

The General Security Directorate is looking into the identities of people who entered and left the country around the time of the killing, he said.

Srour went missing on April 3 in Beit Meri, and his body was found a week later in the villa.

Mawlawi said investigators found "a large number of bullet" wounds in different parts of his body, including his arms and legs. He was reportedly handcuffed.

The villa is located on a quiet side street, lush with trees.

"We did not hear anything," said Christian Francis, who lives across the street from the villa where Srour was killed. He added that most people in the highly secured area have dogs, while municipal police have a checkpoint nearby and the Lebanese army has a post a few hundred meters (yards) away.

Beit Meri’s Mayor Roy Abou Chedid told the AP that the apartment was rented in late February to an unknown person for one year for $48,000. He added that the family that owns the villa did not register the rental contract at the municipality but had paid its municipal taxes on time in November.

"The operation was carried out in a way that is more than professional," Abou Chedid said, adding that the neighbors did not suspect anything and it took security agencies some time to locate which house Srour’s body was in.

A Hezbollah spokesperson declined to comment on the killing, citing the ongoing investigation.

The spokesperson refused to say whether Srour was a Hezbollah member but said that he worked in the past for the al-Qard al-Hasan Association, the financial arm of the Iran-backed group.

The U.S. has accused Srour of transferring tens of millions of dollars annually from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to Hamas’ Qassam Brigades, alleging that starting in 2014, Srour "was identified as in charge of all money transfers" from the IRGC to the Qassam Brigades.

Srour’s family members have not given media interviews since his body was found but said in a televised statement that all his financial transactions were transparent and he simply worked in currency exchange. They urged security agencies to swiftly find the perpetrators.

During Srour’s funeral in his hometown of Labweh in northeast Lebanon, a Hezbollah flag was flown over his coffin and scores of men and women chanted "death to America and death to Israel" as they marched toward the cemetery.