Islamist militants free seized Lebanese policemen in ‘goodwill gesture’

Although Lebanon has avoided the full-scale war afflicting Syria and Iraq, regional conflicts have rekindled decades-old tensions

Mariam Karouny,Alexander Dziadosz
Wednesday 06 August 2014 16:16 BST
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Lebanese soldiers at the Sunni border town of Arsal
Lebanese soldiers at the Sunni border town of Arsal (Reuters)

Islamist militants, who seized the Lebanese town of Arsal at the weekend, released three policemen today as a “goodwill gesture” to allow Sunni Muslim clerics to broker a deal to end four days of fighting near the Syrian border.

At least 16 Lebanese soldiers and dozens of civilians and militants have been killed in the fighting in Arsal in the most serious spillover yet in three years of civil war in Syria. The militants are still believed to be holding about 40 members of the security forces – both soldiers and policemen.

A security source said the three policemen – identified by the militants as Rami Jamal, Khaled Saleh and Tannious Murad – were taken to a nearby hospital. One militant described the move as a “goodwill gesture” to allow talks to proceed.

Sunni clerics from the Muslim Clerics Association left Arsal after meeting with the militants, who say they are willing to withdraw if the army agrees to return to man the checkpoints outside Arsal and not to enter the town itself.

Two soldiers were killed in fighting in Arsal overnight, security sources said, while militants wounded at least seven others in the coastal city of Tripoli. An eight-year-old girl was also shot dead in the port city overnight. The clashes in Arsal began on Saturday after security forces arrested an Islamist commander popular with local rebels who frequently move across the porous border with Syria. Shortly after the arrest, gunmen attacked security forces in the area.

Lebanese security officials say the fighters include members of al-Qa’ida’s Syria branch, the Nusra Front, and Isis, which has seized swathes of land in Syria and Iraq.

Although Lebanon – a country of about four million that borders Israel – has avoided the full-scale war afflicting Syria and Iraq, regional conflicts have rekindled decades-old tensions.

Tripoli has seen frequent clashes between local Sunni Muslims and members of the Shia-derived Alawite minority. On Monday night fighting broke out after news that several Sunni clerics had been wounded as they entered Arsal to try to broker a ceasefire between the army and the militants. Men blocked several Tripoli roads, most shops were closed and streets empty after militants opened fire on a bus carrying soldiers, wounding at least six. Gunmen had also fired on several army positions throughout the port city overnight, the National News Agency said.

Syrian activists and medics in Arsal say fighting has badly damaged the camps that are home to many of the tens of thousands of Syrian refugees estimated to live in and around the town. “The situation is bad. Families are blockaded inside the city. Refugees are on the streets. There is a severe shortage of bread. The medical situation is very bad,” a Syrian witness said via text message.

Fighting had started again in Arsal, a mainly Sunni town, around 7am as the army tried to retake a number of buildings seized by militants, the National News Agency said.

Reuters

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