Tarek Zahed
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Tarek Zahed
Tarek Zahed (born 21 June 1980) is a Sydney-based Lebanese Australians, Lebanese-Australian organised crime figure. He is an alleged member, and former sergeant-at-arms, of the Comanchero Motorcycle Club. The Comanchero Zahed was born in Sydney to a Lebanese people, Lebanese family. His parents were refugees from the Lebanese Civil War. In 1995, he was convicted of assault and of resisting arrest, marking his first major convictions. In 2001, he was again convicted of assault after unleashing his dogs to maul a woman in a road rage incident. In 2004, he was again convicted of assault after stomping on a man's head so hard that he fractured his skull during a drug deal gone bad. In 2009, he began an association with the Comanchero Motorcycle Club, which he later joined. In 2011, he was convicted of attempted murder after shooting a man. He rose to become the national sergeant-at-arms of the Comanchero, in charge of enforcing discipline. Assistant Commissioner of the New South ...
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Lebanese Australians
Lebanese Australians () refers to citizens or permanent residents of Australia of Lebanese people, Lebanese ancestry. The population is diverse, having a large Christianity in Lebanon, Christian religious base, being mostly Lebanese Maronite Christians, Maronite Catholics, while also having a large Islam in Lebanon, Muslim group of Lebanese Sunni Muslims, Sunni and Lebanese Shia Muslims, Shia branches. Lebanon, in both its modern-day form as the Lebanese state (declared 1920; independent 1943), and its historical form as the region of the Lebanon, has been a source of migrants to Australia since the 1870s. 248,430 Australians (about 1% of the total population) claimed some Lebanese ancestry in 2021. The 2021 census reported 87,343 Lebanese-born people in Australia, with nearly 66,000 of those resident in Greater Sydney. Diaspora history 19th-century migration As part of a large-scale emigration in the 1870s, Lebanese Christians fleeing Ottoman Empire’s declining economy, mi ...
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