Al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate today freed 16 Lebanese soldiers and police held for more than year in exchange for the release of prisoners and delivery of aid, authorities said.
The 16 men arrived at an army checkpoint in the mountainous Jurud Arsal region of eastern Lebanon in four Red Cross vehicles, live footage showed.
Lebanon's General Security service confirmed that the men -- three soldiers and 13 policemen -- had been turned over to authorities.
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The groups withdrew under a truce, but took the hostages with them.
Al-Nusra subsequently executed two of its hostages, including Mohammed Hammiya, whose body was turned over to Lebanese authorities earlier on Tuesday in the first stage of the swap deal.
IS also beheaded two of its hostages, and a fifth died of wounds he sustained during the fighting in Arsal.
The fate of the other 25 servicemen has been an ongoing crisis for the Lebanese state, which has entered negotiations multiple times to try to secure their release.
Nine detainees remain in IS custody, though it is unclear whether negotiations are ongoing for their release.
In Beirut, relatives of the freed soldiers and police were ecstatic, weeping and ululating with joy as they watched the men board the Red Cross vehicles under the supervision of masked Al-Nusra fighters.
But several said their joy was "incomplete" without the release of the nine men still held by IS.