(Reuters) -
Lebanese troops detained 50 people in raids on towns and Syrian refugee
camps in the north of the country, the army said on Thursday, part of a
security crackdown after battles with Islamist gunmen over the weekend. The army has mounted several
raids since Islamist militants clashed with soldiers in and around the
northern city of Tripoli from Friday to Sunday, some of the worst
fighting to spill over to Lebanon from the Syrian civil war. Soldiers
moved on the towns of al-Minya, Mashta Hassan, Mashta Hammoud and
refugee camps in the town of Behneen on Wednesday. The 50 detainees were
mainly Syrian but included nine Lebanese and one Palestinian, an army
statement said. In one of the raids, soldiers seized a number of weapons including rocket-propelled grenade launchers as well as communications equipment, the statement said. Soldiers
also stopped and arrested a man at a checkpoint near the northern
Lebanese border town of Arsal who confessed to being a weapons smuggler
for militants in the area. Lebanese
officials fear Islamist insurgents from the Syrian war are trying to
expand their influence into Sunni Muslim areas of northern Lebanon. They
see a rising threat from groups such as al Qaeda's Nusra Front and the
ultra hardline Islamic State, who may try to open up new supply routes
between Syria and Lebanon as winter unfolds. GUNBATTLES, REFUGEES On
Thursday a military court charged a man it said was an important member
of Islamic State, a judicial source said, adding that 17 others were
also charged in absentia. The man,
Ahmed Salim Mikati, was arrested by the army in a raid in northern
Lebanon last week and was described by the military forces as one of the
group's most important operatives in the region. Syria's
war has sparked gunbattles, bombings and kidnappings in Lebanon and
forced more than 1 million Syrian refugees into the small Mediterranean
country, putting a strain on its shaky infrastructure. Islamic State has seized large tracts of territory in Syria and Iraq and is the target of a bombing campaign by U.S.-led forces in both countries. The
Lebanese army said at the time of his arrest that Mikati, who is in his
mid-40s, had set up Islamic State cells in Lebanon, had recruited
fighters and was planning to carry out a major "terrorist act" with his
son. Lebanon has suffered from a
series of bomb attacks and clashes with links to Syria since the start
of the year. The northern battles at the weekend killed at least 11
soldiers, eight civilians and 22 militants, according to security
sources. The fighting marked the
worst Syria-related violence in Lebanon since early August, when
Islamist insurgents affiliated to Nusra Front and Islamic State staged
an incursion into Arsal and took around 20 soldiers captive. In
the southeast close to the Syrian border, Lebanese security services
arrested 12 Syrians on suspicion of belonging to militant groups
involved in the fighting at Arsal and of entering the country illegally,
the army said in a separate statement on Thursday.
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