
Nusra Front Returns Lebanese Soldiers in Swap
by Edward Yeranian December 01, 2015
Thirteen Lebanese soldiers and three police officers held by Jabhat al Nusra militant group, Al Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, were released Tuesday after resolution of a last-minute glitch that delayed the Qatar-brokered prisoner swap by 48 hours.
The exchange, in which Lebanese officials set free 13 prisoners, comes 16 months after Al-Nusra and Islamic State militants briefly overran the town of Arsal on Lebanon's eastern border with Syria after clashes with Lebanese troops. The groups withdrew under a truce deal, but took 30 hostages with them. Four of the hostages were subsequently executed by the two groups, including Mohammed Hammiya, whose body was turned over to Lebanese authorities on Tuesday morning in the first stage of the deal. A fifth died of wounds sustained in the Arsal clashes shortly after he was taken hostage.
According to reports by Reuters and The Washington Post, 'a former wife of the Islamic State's leader was released' in the Tuesday swap. 'Lebanese authorities handed over Saja al-Dulaimi, an Iraqi who was briefly married to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the presumed head of the Islamic State.'
Top Lebanese officials and families celebrated the release of their loved ones amid an outpouring of emotion at the government palace in central Beirut.
Despite the jubilation, the exchange also underlined the uncertainty over the fate of nine other servicemen who are still being held by the Islamic State group.
'[Me and my colleagues, who] have worked to resolve this crisis, welcome Lebanon's sons back after the trials they and their families have endured,' Prime Minister Tamam Salam was quoted as saying via translation, adding that Lebanon 'celebrates its heroes with joy, and deplores the deaths of those who were killed in captivity.'
;;The 16 Lebanese hostages appeared freshly shaven after earlier videos showed them sporting long beards as they were released at the Syrian border.
Prime Minister Salam also thanked those who negotiated the prisoner release, including the Gulf state of Qatar, government mediator Abbas Ibrahim, and the Lebanese Red Cross.
Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi told journalists the 'efforts of the last year and four months to solve the crisis appeared to jell in the last five days, as pragmatism prevailed."
Families embraced their newly-released loved ones at a sit-in camp they have maintained over many months and are now preparing to dismantle.
The 13 prisoners Lebanon released included five women.
Another nine Lebanese soldiers are still being held by the Islamic State group.
Some information for this report came from Reuters.
NEWSLETTER
|
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list |
|
|