Israel Tries Frenchman Accused of Gaza-West Bank Gun-Running

French national Romain Franck (R), 24, a worker at the French consulate, and Palestinian M
JACK GUEZ/AFP/Getty

(AFP) A French employee of his country’s consulate in Jerusalem who has been accused of smuggling dozens of guns from the Gaza Strip to the West Bank in an official car appeared in an Israeli court Monday.

Romain Franck, a 24-year-old French citizen who worked as a driver at the consulate, is accused along with several Palestinian suspects of belonging to a gun-running network.

He appeared in court in the southern city of Beersheba in a gray T-shirt. His parents and a French embassy representative also attended the hearing.

After Franck’s lawyer requested more time to prepare his case and asked for an official translation into French of the charge sheet, the judge adjourned the trial to September 16.

Franck allegedly took advantage of reduced security checks for consular vehicles to transport the weapons out of Gaza to the West Bank.

Israeli authorities have stressed he acted on his own without the consulate’s knowledge, adding that diplomatic relations with France were not affected.

According to the Shin Bet domestic security agency, he was motivated by money and was paid a total of around $5,500.

It said Franck, who was arrested on February 15, had transferred 70 pistols and two automatic rifles in five trips. A total of nine suspects have been arrested.

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