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A picture released by the media office of Lebanon's Shiite militant group Hezbollah shows an ambulance convoy of the movement carrying bodies of fighters killed in week-long clashes in the Jurud Arsal border region, as part of a ceasefire deal. Image Credit: AFP

Beirut: Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah movement and the Al Qaida-linked Al Nusra Front on Sunday started exchanging the bodies of fighters as part of a ceasefire deal for the restive Syria-Lebanon border.

The truce, announced by Hezbollah and confirmed by Lebanon’s General Security agency on Thursday, ended six days of an assault by the group in the mountainous Jurud Arsal border region.

Hezbollah’s “War Media” outlet reported on Sunday that the “first phase of the deal” had begun.

“The bodies of nine Al Nusra fighters will be handed over to the Lebanese General Security in exchange for the remains of five Hezbollah fighters who died in the Jurud battles,” the outlet said.

It said the bodies of the Syrian militants had been transported to a hospital for medical examinations.

Their remains are then expected to be transported to Syria’s northwestern province of Idlib.

Al Nusra Front was Al Qaida’s affiliate in Syria until mid-2016 when it broke off ties, before going on to found a new alliance called Hayat Tahrir Al Sham (HTS), which now controls large swathes of Idlib.

Hezbollah launched its offensive on Jurud Arsal — a barren border area used by militants as a hideout for several years — on July 21.

The group took media outlets on several guided tours of the territory it had secured, including an underground base allegedly used by militants.

Military-style vests were piled in one corner near stacked sandbags. Papers were strewn all over the carpeted floor in one room, and crates of ammunition were stored in another.

Hezbollah had cornered rival fighters in a small pocket of territory when it announced the truce.

Head of Lebanon’s General Security agency Major-General Ebrahim Abbas later confirmed the deal, which he said would also see the transfer “within days” of Syrian fighters and refugees to Idlib province with the help of Lebanon’s Red Cross.

Tens of thousands of Syrian refugees live in the town of Arsal, adjacent to the border region, while an unknown number are also thought to have taken shelter in the surrounding mountains.

More than one million Syrians are registered with the United Nations as refugees in Lebanon, a country of just four million people.