The Standard (St. Catharines)

Remains of Lebanon soldiers held by IS located

- SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT — The remains of eight Lebanese soldiers kidnapped by the Islamic State group three years ago were located Sunday, a senior Lebanese official said, in a negotiated deal that followed a military offensive to drive the militants out of the border area with Syria.

Abbas Ibrahim, the chief of Lebanese General Security, said six bodies buried in Lebanon near the border with Syria were removed. He said the operation continued to pull out two more bodies but the fate of a ninth soldier remained unknown.

The soldiers’ remains were transporte­d later Sunday to Beirut’s military hospital for DNA tests to determine their identities.

Locating the soldiers’ remains was part of a deal that comes a week after the Lebanese military launched a campaign to drive out IS militants from some 120 sq. km in a rugged mountainou­s area that straddles the Lebanese-Syrian border.

Separately but simultaneo­usly, the Lebanese Hezbollah militia, in co-operation with the Syrian army, launched another offensive to pressure the IS militants in Syrian territorie­s along the same border area.

The U.S-backed Lebanese army denies it co-ordinated with the Syrian government.

The deal also entails the transfer of remaining IS militants on both sides of the border to eastern Syria’s Deir el-Zour province, which is mostly controlled by the extremist group. The Syrian government, backed by Russian air power and Iranian-organized militias, is preparing an offensive to recapture the oil-rich province.

After a week of fighting, ceasefires were announced on both sides of the border earlier Sunday. The Lebanese army said the halt in fighting, which came after 100 sq. km were cleared of militants, was to allow for negotiatio­ns to determine the fate of the soldiers.

Hezbollah and Syrian media said the cease-fire was to allow for the comprehens­ive deal.

Hezbollah, which Western nations view as a terrorist organizati­on, has been fighting alongside President Bashar Assad’s forces inside Syria since 2013.

Lebanon’s main political factions are bitterly divided over the war in neighbouri­ng Syria, and many would fiercely object to any direct co-operation with Assad’s government. Lebanese were also divided over the outcome of the deal, some taking to social media to criticize the negotiatio­ns with the militants. Others hailed the deal and evacuation of the militants as a victory.

Ibrahim said after IS militants were driven into Syria under pressure from the Lebanese military, the deal became possible. He said detained militants revealed the location of the soldiers’ remains. They were still wearing their military uniforms, he said.

Ibrahim said he was part of the negotiatio­ns over the fate of the soldiers, but Hezbollah and Syria sorted out the larger deal.

“The first article in this deal was (determinin­g) the fate of the soldiers,” Ibrahim told reporters from outside the tents set up for years by the families of the missing soldiers looking for their relatives. “This case ... has regrettabl­y been closed on a dark note.” Relatives of the soldiers broke down in tears and declined to talk to the media.

The soldiers were among more than 20 kidnapped in 2014 when militants linked to al-Qaida and IS overran the border town, Arsal. Most of those kidnapped were later released. It was the most serious spillover into Lebanon from the sixyear Syrian war. Al-Qaida-linked militants were evacuated from the area earlier this month, following a Hezbollah offensive there.

The Syrian official news agency SANA said the area along the border would be declared free of IS militants soon. A Syrian military official told the agency that the evacuation of IS militants, negotiated by Hezbollah, has been approved.

 ?? BILAL HUSSEIN/AP PHOTO ?? The mother of Mustafa Ali Wehbe who was kidnapped by Islamic State group militants weeps in a tent set up in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunday.
BILAL HUSSEIN/AP PHOTO The mother of Mustafa Ali Wehbe who was kidnapped by Islamic State group militants weeps in a tent set up in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunday.

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