Lebanese court upholds death sentence for Uber driver convicted of killing British woman

A Lebanese court has upheld the death sentence for an Uber driver convicted of killing a British woman who worked for the U.K. Embassy in Beirut five years ago, the embassy said Friday.

According to a statement from the embassy, Lebanon’s Court of Cassation rejected an appeal by Tariq Houshieh in the case and affirmed his guilty conviction in the killing of Rebecca Dykes.

Dykes, who worked for the Department for International Development, was found dead on Dec. 16, 2017, on the side of a road, strangled and showing signs of sexual assault. Houshieh was arrested days later.

IRISH UNITED NATIONS PEACEKEEPER KILLED, SEVERAL WOUNDED AFTER ATTACKERS OPENED FIRE IN LEBANON

The murder shook the expat community in Beirut, where such crimes are rare and where foreigners generally feel safe.

A Lebanese activist lays a flower at the poster of Rebecca Dykes, a British woman who was murdered by an Uber driver, during a candlelight vigil to condemn violence against women in Beirut, Lebanon, on Dec. 23, 2017.

A Lebanese activist lays a flower at the poster of Rebecca Dykes, a British woman who was murdered by an Uber driver, during a candlelight vigil to condemn violence against women in Beirut, Lebanon, on Dec. 23, 2017.
(Marwan Naamani/picture alliance via Getty Images))

“We hope this verdict will bring some closure for Becky’s family, for the many around the world who loved Becky, and for all those whose lives she touched through her humanitarian work in Lebanon and elsewhere,” the embassy said.

ISRAEL ANNOUNCES MARITIME BORDER DEAL WITH LEBANON

Dykes’ family, in a separate statement carried by Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency, said the final verdict followed multiple delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic, court employee strikes and other issues.

The final ruling is “an occasion to remember Rebecca as a young woman who had dedicated her short life to the victims of war and misery,” the statement said. “Her family had never seen Rebecca as motivated and happy as she was during her stay in Lebanon.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

After her death, Dykes’ family and friends set up a foundation in her name “dedicated to the creation of stable communities in Lebanon.”

Houshieh was sentenced to death in 2019, although there is a de facto moratorium on capital punishment in Lebanon. No executions have been carried out since 2004.

Check Also

North Korea threatens retaliation for US, South Korea military drills: not ‘empty talk’

North Korea is warning its southern neighbors and the United States that it is not …