Nine Lebanese pilgrims kidnapped in Syria freed
19 Oct Haaretz
Nine Lebanese Shiite pilgrims kidnapped by rebels in Syria last year
have been released, with signs that two Turkish pilots whose abduction
was linked to their capture may also be freed.
"The nine Lebanese held in Syria are on their way to Turkey,"
Lebanon's interior minister Marwan Charbel told AFP .The country's Prime
Minister Najib Mikati added in a statement that the former hostages were
"in a secure place and are ready to enter Lebanon".Mikati extended
congratulations to the free Lebanese, their families and the whole
country on turning "a sad page for Lebanon. We thank all those who
contributed to achieving their freedom, brothers and friendly nations."
He also revealed that Qatar's Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiyah, who
is in Turkey, will accompany the pilgrims back to Lebanon. Attiyah told
Al-Jazeera television that Qatari mediation led to their release.The
release also came after a senior Lebanese security official travelled to
Damascus to discuss a prisoner exchange deal to free the group, who were
abducted in Syria's northern Aleppo province in May 2012 as their
families said they were returning from a pilgrimage to Iran.
Turkey said the detention of two Turkish Airlines pilots kidnapped in
Beirut in August was close to ending.The pilots were abducted by a
previously unknown group, which said it had seized the pair to secure
the release of the nine Lebanese citizens held captive in Syria.
"Very favourable developments are under way concerning the two
Turkish pilots. This matter has been largely settled," Turkish Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on local television, adding that the men
could be freed "within hours or days".The relatives of the nine Lebanese
pilgrims have denied responsibility for kidnapping the pilots, though
they said they were happy to see additional pressure placed on
Ankara.They had accused Turkey of not doing enough to win the release of
their loved ones from Syrian rebels.On August 9, gunmen ambushed a bus
carrying a Turkish Airlines crew from Beirut's international airport to
a hotel in the city, and snatched the pilot and co-pilot.
A group calling itself Zuwwar Imam al-Rida claimed the abduction, and
demanded that Turkey use its influence with Syrian rebels it backs to
secure the release of the nine Lebanese Shiites.We announce that captain
Murat Akpinar and his co-pilot Murat Agca are our guests until the
release of our brothers, who were kidnapped in Aazaz (in Syria) after
visiting holy sites," the group said in a statement in August carried by
Lebanese media.Turkey is directly responsible for the freedom" of the
Lebanese hostages, the statement added.
The pilots were seized just outside the airport, in an area
controlled by the powerful Shiite Lebanese movement Hezbollah.Hezbollah
chief Hassan Nasrallah has denied any involvement in the kidnapping.The
pre-dawn abduction prompted Turkey to urge its citizens to leave the
country, and raised new fears about the impact of Syria's conflict on
neighbouring Lebanon.About a week after the kidnapping, Lebanese
authorities arrested three suspects, whose identities were not revealed,
a judicial source told AFP at the time.
|