Qatar halts mediation to free Lebanese soldiers
Qatar says its efforts have failed after one of the captives was killed by Nusra Front militants
Qatar has halted its bid to broker the release of Lebanese soldiers and policemen captured by Islamist militants during a raid on a Lebanese border town in August, saying its efforts had failed after one of the captives was killed.
Militants affiliated with the Nusra Front and the al-Qaeda offshoot Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group took captive more than two dozen members of the Lebanese security forces during the August incursion.
The Nusra Front said on Friday it had killed one of them in retaliation for the arrest by Lebanese authorities of women identified as wives of Islamist militants.
Infographic: Qatar –Lebanon Soldiers Mediation

Qatar had previously helped mediate the release of hostages held by Nusra, al-Qaeda’s official affiliate in the Syrian war.
“The (Qatari) Foreign Ministry announced that it was no longer possible for Qatar to continue its efforts to free the Lebanese military personnel who were kidnapped in August from the environs of the town of Arsal,” the ministry said in a statement posted on its website on Sunday.
The ministry said its decision was based on the failure to secure the captives’ release. It also expressed regret over the latest death - the fourth of the captives killed since August.
The SITE intelligence monitoring center said in November that Nusra Front had proposed to a Qatari negotiator freeing the Lebanese captives in return for the release of Islamist prisoners held in Syria and Lebanon.
Lebanese authorities said last week they had detained a wife of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and the wife of a Nusra front leader.
Lebanese media have reported that the women were viewed by some Lebanese officials as a possible bargaining chip with the militants to gain the release of the captive soldiers.
-
Gunmen open fire on refugee camp in Lebanon, 2 wounded
Security sources say the gunmen had not been identified but that they were young men from the northern Lebanese province of Akkar Middle East -
Lebanon’s political paralysis cannot weather Arab storms
Lebanon, with its weak and fragile institutions and society and political paralysis, is ill-equipped to survive such a war Middle East -
‘I will attack women,’ al-Qaeda militant warns Lebanon after wife detained
The threat, delivered in a video distributed on jihadist websites, was published on Friday Middle East -
Lebanon erupts after Nusra Front-linked murder
The body of an unidentified Sunni man who had been shot dead was found on a road in the mainly Shiite Bekaa Valley region Middle East -
Celebrating the icons Lebanon has lost
Last week, Lebanon lost singer and actress Sabah and poet Said Akl Middle East -
Lebanon: DNA test says child is ISIS head’s daughter
The Interior Minister said the girl and two other children detained with al-Dulaimi are being held in a child care center Middle East -
Iraq says woman detained in Lebanon is not Baghdadi's wife
Earlier this year, photos of Saja Dulaimi surfaced online, with media reports suggesting she was Baghdadi's wife Middle East