Taher Abu Hamdan
AFP
HALWA, Lebanon — Clashes broke out on Wednesday between the Lebanese army and pro-Syrian Palestinian guerrillas near the Syrian border, wounding two people, and a soldier was detained for several hours, police said.
The soldier, Khaled Ibrahim, was snatched and then freed by guerrillas of the Damascus-based group Fatah-Intifada, which is founded by a Palestinian militant known as Abu Mussa, they said.
Abu Fadi Hammad, the Lebanon representative of Abu Mussa’s group, said that one guerrilla was wounded in the clashes and that the detained soldier had been handed back to the army.
A senior army official said that a soldier was also wounded in the fighting in Wadi Al Asswad village of eastern Lebanon as troops and militants traded fire with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades.
The army, in a statement, said that troops retaliated after coming under fire from "Palestinian elements" during a patrol near "a newly set up position". Soldiers later dismantled the post and confiscated equipment, it said.
The statement did not mention the kidnapping but said that one soldier was "gravely wounded" in the clashes.
ntain fort close to Israel’s heavily guarded border with Lebanon.
BEIRUT (AFP) – Lebanese leaders have adjourned the latest round of reconciliation talks, still unable to find a consensus on the future of embattled pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud.
AIN AL-HILWEH, LEBANON – After decades of uneasy relations, Lebanon and its Palestinian population are set to embark on a ground-breaking dialogue to improve conditions in the Palestinian refugee camps and curb uncontrolled armed groups.
BEIRUT (AFP) – Tractors started to dismantle sand berms erected by Syrian border guards several kilometers inside Lebanese territory, the head of a municipality in the region said.
needed to force Syria "to come out of denial" and recognize Lebanon’s independence by establishing diplomatic relations and setting their border.
KUWAIT CITY – Syria’s foreign minister said Friday the U.N. Security Council’s involvement in Syria and Lebanon may impede attempts to improve relations between the two countries.
Financial times,
By Lin Noueihed , BEIRUT (Reuters) – Rival politicians resumed talks on Friday to end Lebanon’s political crisis but were unlikely to decide to dismiss the president or agree on the fate of Hizbollah’s weapons. The "national dialogue" conference, the first top-level political gathering since Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, was adjourned on April 3 with a promise to lay to rest a dispute over whether Emile Lahoud should stay or go. 


