The Standard (St. Catharines)

Rebels, civilians leave Lebanon border

- BASSEM MROUE

BEIRUT — Hundreds of Syrian rebels and civilians started leaving the Lebanon-Syria border area Monday after a deal was reached for their departure following days of delay, the media arm of Lebanon’s militant Hezbollah group said.

In Beirut, meanwhile, the U.S. handed over to the Lebanese army eight Bradley Fighting Vehicles, part of a total of 32 that will be delivered over the coming months. The military aid is aimed at helping Lebanon combat extremist groups and prevent further spillover from neighbouri­ng Syria.

At the border, buses carrying members of the Levant People’s Brigades rebel group started moving from the Lebanese border town of Arsal in the direction of the Syrian village of Fleeta.

The evacuation comes nearly two weeks after more than 7,000 Syrians, many of them al- Qaida-linked fighters and their families, left Arsal following a Hezbollah offensive.

The Levant People’s Brigades, whose members did not take part in last month’s battles, will be heading to the Syrian town of Ruhaiba, about 50 km northeast of the Syrian capital, Damascus, where they will return to normal life following an amnesty by the state, according to Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV.

Hezbollah’s Military Media said that by Monday afternoon, some 1,500 fighters and civilians had left. Another 300 were scheduled to leave later in the day bound for their government-held hometowns in the western parts of the Qalamoun region, near the border with Lebanon.

The only insurgents remaining on Lebanon’s side of the border now are members of Islamic State. Hundreds of Islamic State fighters control a stretch of land that is almost equally split between Lebanon and Syria. The Lebanese army has been preparing an attack for weeks, sending in reinforcem­ents and pounding the area with artillery shells and rockets. The Syrian army and Hezbollah are preparing for a simultaneo­us attack on the Syrian side of the border.

At the Bradley handover ceremony at Beirut’s port, U.S. Ambassador Elizabeth Richard said the vehicles represent an investment of over $100 million that will “provide the Lebanese Armed Forces with new capabiliti­es to protect Lebanon, to protect its borders and to fight terrorists.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A Syrian rebel fighter gestures as he is being evacuated from northeaste­rn Lebanon on Monday in a mountainou­s area around the Lebanese town of Arsal along the border with Syria.
GETTY IMAGES A Syrian rebel fighter gestures as he is being evacuated from northeaste­rn Lebanon on Monday in a mountainou­s area around the Lebanese town of Arsal along the border with Syria.

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