Lebanese pop star turned militant fugitive Fadel Shaker has surrendered to the country’s military intelligence, ending more than a decade on the run. Security and judicial officials confirmed that Shaker, who once topped Arab music charts before embracing militancy, was taken into custody Saturday night near the Ein el-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in Sidon.
Shaker, 55, had been hiding inside the camp for over 12 years following violent clashes in June 2013 between the Lebanese army and militants loyal to hard-line Sunni cleric Sheikh Ahmad al-Assir. The battle left at least 18 Lebanese soldiers dead and sharply escalated sectarian tensions between Sunnis and Shiites in the country.
In 2020, a Lebanese court sentenced Shaker in absentia to 22 years in prison on charges of supporting a terrorist group. However, officials said those sentences will now be annulled since he is in custody. Instead, he will face questioning and new trials over alleged crimes committed against the Lebanese military during the Sidon clashes.
The handover was reportedly the result of behind-the-scenes negotiations involving mediators and Lebanon’s Defense Ministry. Military intelligence units picked Shaker up at one of the camp’s entrances and transferred him into custody without incident.
Shaker has long denied direct involvement in the 2013 fighting, claiming he never advocated violence. Yet, during the clashes, a video circulated online showing him with a beard, insulting the Lebanese army as “pigs and dogs” and boasting of snatching the bodies of slain soldiers.
Once adored across the Arab world, Shaker’s transformation stunned his fans. He rose to fame in 2002 with a breakthrough hit and remained a household name for nearly a decade. But under al-Assir’s influence, he renounced his music career in 2011, saying he wanted to grow closer to God.
In a surprising twist, Shaker reappeared in the entertainment scene in July 2025 with his son Mohammed, releasing a duet that went viral and gained more than 113 million views on YouTube. Despite his past, the song reignited his popularity across the Arab world, especially among younger audiences.
His surrender also coincides with a broader Lebanese military effort to assert control over Palestinian refugee camps, which have long remained outside the authority of the state and harbored fugitives and armed factions.
Shaker’s fate now rests with Lebanon’s judiciary, where he could face new charges that may determine whether his story will end in redemption or further punishment.






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