Living in Beirut, I had heard whispers of the “dawn raiders"— armed state security forces who arrive at your home at dawn— but never did I imagine they would come for me. That day came on 19 October, when I was detained at 6am after a warrant was issued by Judge Claude Ghanem, the Assistant Government Commissioner to the Military Court, sanctioning my arrest.
What I had supposedly done, I had not done. It related to a social media post about Israel. This was entirely fabricated. Someone had concocted it, purporting to be me. I found myself ensnared in an absurd yet vicious scandal.
What happened? A false account bearing my image and purporting to be me commented on an Israeli post. Then, a snapshot of this fabrication was circulated and quickly went viral. This fuelled an incitement campaign dripped in malice, even though anyone with a shred of sense could see that the post was fake. Yet within hours, the State Security Agency—known for its brazen disregard for the rights of citizens—chose not to see the obvious and to arrest me at home.
I am far from the first citizen to have their rights violated in this way, nor will I be the last. I am a journalist, not a drug dealer, not a fugitive, not an assassin. I didn’t blow up Beirut’s port or kill Rafic Hariri. I write for a living. Though it took the authorities little time to recognise that the post was a fake, that did not deter them from stripping away my privacy. When I was “released”, I stepped back into a world where the air was thick with lies.