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Lebanon army vows to fight 'terror'

Lebanon's army is stepping up its fight against "terrorism" following a suicide bombing which killed three soldiers near the Syrian border.

Lebanon's army is vowing to battle "terrorism" after a suicide bomber killed three soldiers at a checkpoint near its eastern border with war-torn Syria.

"The army knows that it is now more than ever targeted by terrorists who want to prevent the establishment of the authority of the state and its attempts to eliminate discord," the military said in a statement issued late on Saturday.

It came as a new security plan came into effect on Sunday aimed at quelling spillover violence from the conflict in Syria.

As a result, the army will deploy more heavily in flashpoint areas of Arsal in the east and Lebanon in the north.

The military will also conduct raids aimed at arresting suspects, and in restive Tripoli the army will disarm fighters.

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Lebanon's north and east have seen clashes and attacks between those who support the rebellion against Syria's President Bashar al-Assad and those who back Damascus.

The army command "will continue to fight and pursue terrorists, and is determined to implement the security plan ... whatever the sacrifices", the statement said.

But in a fresh incident on Sunday, the army defused a bomb set to explode at a military post in Tripoli, a security source said.

The narrowly averted attack came a day after three soldiers were killed when a suicide bomber detonated his vehicle at an army checkpoint at Aqabet al-Jurd in the Arsal region.

Arsal, near the border with Syria, is a Sunni town where residents support the rebels fighting Assad's forces. The town also hosts tens of thousands of Syrian refugees.

Saturday's attack was claimed on Twitter by a shadowy group calling itself Liwa Ahrar al-Sunna - Arabic for the Brigades of the free Sunni Muslims - which also vowed more attacks.

It said it was to avenge the death of Sami al-Atrash, wanted in connection with car bombings targeting Lebanon's Shi'ite militant group Hezbollah which has been fighting alongside Assad's forces.


2 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP



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