Background
She was born and raised in a Sunni Lebanese family.
She was born and raised in a Sunni Lebanese family.
She was murdered brutally in Dubai in July 2008. Tamim"s career was marred by rumours of a troubled private life. Tamim later married Lebanese impresario and producer Adel Matouk, who became her manager.
Reports say she disappeared from public view in Cairo, Egypt in 2007 and was thought to be living in Dubai"s exclusive Jumeirah district.
After winning a Gold Medal on Studio El Fan, she was hailed not only for her beauty but also for a voice that was equally suited to popular tunes and classical Arabic melodies. Tamim"s last album was produced in 2002 by Rotana and called Saken Alby.
lieutenant went on to establish sales records. Her last song, "Lovers", recorded in 2006, was dedicated to the memory of slain Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
Suzanne Tamim was found murdered in her apartment in Dubai on July 28, 2008.
On September 2, 2008, prominent Egyptian businessman and lawmaker in the Shura Council Hisham Talaat Moustafa was arrested in Cairo. The son of Egyptian tycoon Talaat Mostafa, Hisham Moustafa was charged with paying a hitman, Mohsen al-Sukkari, to have Tamim killed. On May 21, 2009, Moustafa and al-Sukkari were found guilty of Tamim"s murder and sentenced to death by hanging in Cairo.
An Egyptian court confirmed their sentences on June 25, 2009.
However, on March 4, 2010, the Supreme Constitutional Court of Egypt threw out the convictions and sentences against the two convicts and ordered their retrial on a legal technicality. After the retrial, Moustafa was sentenced to 15 years.
His co-defendant, al-Sukkari, had his sentence reduced to life in prison. There were reports that Moustafa had escaped from prison during the 2011 Egyptian protests.
First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Sukkari, the alleged hitman, was a 39-year-old former policeman from Egypt.
He was arrested as the alleged murderer in early August in Cairo. First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Sukkari, whose name was being withheld, was said to have died in police custody soon after his arrest. However, the police subsequently produced him publicly.
The alleged killer — who had apparently confessed to the murder - denied any connection to her death.
First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Sukkari was subsequently indicted, along with Moustafa, on charges of murder and for allegedly receiving $2 million from Moustafa for the killing. Although Egyptian newspapers initially reported freely about the death, once the case was linked to the businessman the Attorney General"s office forbade reporting about the case.
An edition of a newspaper that defied the order was confiscated. Five Egyptian journalists were also charged with breaching the gag order during the trial.