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Beirut welcomes freed prisoners
BayBak, Azerbaijan | 1797 days ago | Wednesday, 16th July , 2008 , 22:09 [pm] | International
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. | “I cannot understand what the Lebanese are so glad about and happy about,” he said.
“They sacrificed over 700 of their best warriors and all their economy, and what they get for what they did is a murderer, a bloody murderer of a three-and-a-half-year-old girl and her father – and for this they are making all this glory, for this they sacrificed so much. So I feel only pity for them.” |
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has personally welcomed five militants released by Israel after they arrived in Lebanon’s capital, Beirut.
The Israelis handed over the prisoners, along with the remains of 200 Lebanese and Palestinian fighters, in exchange for the remains of two of its soldiers.
Their capture in 2006 sparked a month of war between Israel and Hezbollah.
Greeting the five returnees, Sheikh Nasrallah said the “age of defeats” was over and that of victories had arrived.
The Israeli soldiers, Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser, were seized in 2006 but until now there had been no confirmation of their deaths.
The two Israeli soldiers are due to be given military funerals on Thursday.
Israeli generals informed their families of their deaths personally, following their identification by Israeli forensic experts.
Earlier, relatives broke into tears on seeing TV images of Hezbollah handing over the two coffins.
The Lebanese prisoners crossed into Lebanon after being taken to Israel’s Rosh Hanikra border crossing, the exchange mediated by the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Changing into combat fatigues, they were given a jubilant reception in the coastal town of Naqoura before being flown to the capital, Beirut, where Lebanese President Michel Suleiman and other officials greeted them.
Lorries were conveying the remains of the dead fighters, who include both Lebanese and Palestinians.
Red carpet
Lebanon has declared a national holiday to mark the swap, which leaves Israel with no more Hezbollah militants in its custody.
The BBC’s Crispin Thorold in Beirut says the exchange is a moment of jubilation for Hezbollah, who are claiming the deal as a victory.
The Lebanese president welcomed the five ex-prisoners to Beirut as “resistance fighters coming back from the prisons of the occupier”.
Hassan Nasrallah’s public appearance to welcome the prisoners was his first since September 2006.
He was cheered by thousands of flag-waving supporters.
Earlier, hundreds of spectators in southern Lebanon cheered as the men were given a hero’s welcome by Hezbollah leaders.
Martial music blared as the five walked down a red carpet in Naqoura.
Under the deal – the fruit of two years of delicate German mediation – Hezbollah is also to return the remains of Israeli soldiers killed in south Lebanon in 2006.
The agreement has caused controversy in Israel, with some ministers opposed to exchanging live Hezbollah prisoners for dead bodies.
But Israel says it has a moral obligation to bring its soldiers home.
Israel’s cabinet gave its final approval for the prisoner exchange on Tuesday.
Qantar controversy
The five Lebanese prisoners freed include Samir Qantar, in jail since 1979 for a deadly guerrilla raid in which he killed three Israelis, including a child.
The killings were particularly brutal, making his release controversial in Israel.
Qantar was serving several life sentences for murder for attacking a civilian apartment block in the Israeli coastal town Nahariya in 1979 along with three other gunmen who landed by dinghy from Lebanon.
A policeman, and a father and his four-year-old daughter, were killed. A baby girl was accidentally smothered by her mother as she hid in a cupboard during the attack.
Qantar has said he does not remember killing the four-year-old, who was battered to death with a rifle butt after her father was shot.
Two of the other gunmen with Qantar were killed. A third was jailed but later freed in a prisoner swap in 1985.
Qantar’s imprisonment was arguably a catalyst for the 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel, our correspondent says, as Lebanese militants captured the two Israeli soldiers to demand his release.
Ehud Goldwasser’s father, Shlomo Goldwasser, said he was mystified by the Lebanese celebrations, coming after the recent war with Israel.
“I cannot understand what the Lebanese are so glad about and happy about,” he said.
“They sacrificed over 700 of their best warriors and all their economy, and what they get for what they did is a murderer, a bloody murderer of a three-and-a-half-year-old girl and her father – and for this they are making all this glory, for this they sacrificed so much. So I feel only pity for them.”
Hezbollah withheld any information about when the soldiers had died and never released pictures of them in captivity, leaving it unclear whether they had been killed in the original raid.
However, one Hezbollah official quoted by Lebanese TV on Wednesday confirmed that both soldiers had been seriously injured during the raid, and later died of their injuries.bbc
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[...] Beirut welcomes freed prisoners. “I cannot understand what the Lebanese are so glad about and happy about,” he said. “They sacrificed over 700 of their best warriors and all their economy, and what they get for what they did is a murderer, a bloody murderer of a … [...]
[...] Beirut welcomes freed prisoners. “I cannot understand what the Lebanese are so glad about and happy about,” he said. “They sacrificed over 700 of their best warriors and all their economy, and what they get for what they did is a murderer, a bloody murderer of a … [...]