WORLD> Middle East
Hezbollah, Israel complete prisoner swap deal
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-07-17 07:41

Hezbollah handed the bodies of two Israeli soldiers to the Red Cross Wednesday to be exchanged for Lebanese prisoners held by Israel in a deal viewed as a triumph by the Lebanese Shi'ite guerrilla group.

Many Israelis see it as a painful necessity, two years after the soldiers' capture sparked a 34-day war with Hezbollah that killed about 1,200 people in Lebanon and 159 Israelis.


Hezbollah members hand over the bodies of the two Israeli soldiers to the Red Cross to be exchanged for Lebanese prisoners held by Israel at the Naqoura border point with Israel July 16,2008. [Agencies]

Two black coffins were unloaded from a Hezbollah vehicle at a UN peacekeeping base on the Israel-Lebanon border after a Hezbollah official, Wafik Safa, disclosed for the first time that army reservists Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev were dead.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) took the coffins to Israel. The Israeli army later said forensic teams had identified the cadavers as those of its missing men. Israeli generals visited Goldwasser and Regev families to notify them.

"The Israeli side will now hand over the great Arab mujahid (holy warrior) ... Samir Qantar and his companions to the ICRC," Safa said at the Naqoura border on the Mediterranean coast.

In a deal mediated by a UN-appointed German intelligence officer, Israel freed Qantar and four other prisoners said by Hezbollah to be the last Lebanese captives in Israel.

The swap will close a file that has motivated repeated Hezbollah attempts over the past quarter century to capture Israelis to use as bargaining counters.

Qantar had been serving a life prison term for the deaths of four Israelis, including a four-year-old girl and her father, in a 1979 Palestinian guerrilla attack on an Israeli town.

The fathers of the two Israelis soldiers spoke of their pain at watching television pictures of their sons' coffins.

"It is not easy to see this, although there was not much surprise to it. But ... confronting this reality was difficult, yes," Shlomo Goldwasser told Israel radio.

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