Khazen

ROSH HANIKRA, Israel (Reuters) - Israel returned on Friday the bodies of three Hizbollah guerrillas killed in a clash earlier this week in a move that military sources said was aimed at easing tension on the Lebanese border.The three were killed on Monday in one of the fiercest battles on the border since Israel withdrew its forces from southern Lebanon in May 2000 after a 22-year occupation.

The bodies were handed over on Friday morning to officials from the International Committee for the Red Cross at the Rosh Hanikra crossing on the Israeli-Lebanese border."The bodies were returned as a confidence-building gesture to create calm along the Israel-Lebanon border," a military source said.Four gunmen died during Monday's Hizbollah raid of Ghajar, a divided village that straddles the border. Lebanese sources said the raid aimed, but failed, to seize Israeli soldiers who could be traded for Arabs jailed in Israel.

BEIRUT (AP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) - US officials urged Lebanon's Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun to back a broad, reform-minded coalition for his country but renewed their opposition to the militant Islamist group Hezbollah. Former Prime minister Aoun,  and now a member of the Lebanese parliament, met with senior US officials as part of a two-week visit to the United States begun on November 14.He conferred with David Welch, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, and was meeting later Wednesday with Undersecretary for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns, number three in the State Department.

A State Department official, who asked not to be named, said the talks covered the investigation into the February 14 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri.Also discussed was this week's violence on the Lebanese-Israeli border and UN Security Council Resolution 1559, which calls for the disarmament of Hezbollah as well as an end to the Syrian presence in Lebanon. "We are encouraging ... General Aoun to support a broad coalition of political parties as Lebanon struggles to implement political economic and constitutional reforms," the official said.

JERUSALEM, Nov 24 (Reuters) - Israel plans to return the bodies of three Lebanese Hizbollah gunmen slain in a fierce border clash, in hope of easing tensions with the guerrilla group and Beirut, Israeli security sources said on Thursday. Four gunmen died during a Hizbollah raid on Monday which Lebanese security sources said aimed, but failed, to seize Israeli soldiers who could be traded for Arabs jailed in Israel.

One of the dead was retrieved by the Lebanese but the rest remained on the Israeli side of Ghajar, a divided border town. Eleven Israeli soldiers were wounded in the clashes, the fiercest since the Jewish state withdrew forces from southern Lebanon in 2000 after a 22-year occupation. Israel retaliated for the Hizbollah raid with shelling and air strikes.

Khazen History

Historical Feature:
Churches and Monasteries of the Khazen family