Five Lebanese prisoners have been handed over to the Hezbollah movement by Israel, as part of a swap for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers.
The freed men arrived to a heroes' welcome at the Naqoura border crossing on Wednesday, just hours after Israel received coffins containing the remains of Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev, two Israeli army reservists captured in 2006.
The prisoners released were Samir Kuntar, who was jailed for three murders in Israel in 1979, and four men captured during the 34-day war sparked by the capture of Goldwasser and Regev.
They were the last remaining Lebanese in Israeli custody.
Hezbollah also received the bodies of almost 200 people, including the body of Dalal al-Maghrebi, a female fighter with the Palestinian Fatah movement.
Before the exchange there had been speculation that at least one of the Israeli soldiers had been alive, but Hezbollah TV confirmed that both were dead.
Two coffins containing the bodies were taken in Red Cross vehicles across the border from Lebanon into Israel to be identified.
'Difficult decision'
The prisoners were brought across the border in a convoy of four International Committee of the Red Cross vehicles and were greeted by Wafiq Safa, Hezbollah's chief prisoner swap negotiator.
Kuntar, the longest serving Arab prisoner in Israel, was wearing a grey sweatshirt and jeans as he descended from a vehicle to embrace crowds of wellwishers.
"The Israeli cabinet agonised over it [the exchange] and voted in favour of it against the advice of the Israeli intelligence service ... which thinks it will only encourage kidnappings," David Chater, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Israel, said.
"But the bulk of Israeli public opinion is behind this deal," he said, reporting from Rosh Hanikra - the Israeli side of the border - where he said there was a strong military presence ahead of the exchange.
Miri Eisin, a former aide to Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, said Israel found the release of Kuntar an "incredibly difficult decision".
"Today in Israel we are mainly reflecting on the price we pay in our country to defend our borders," she told Al Jazeera.
At the family home of reservist Regev, a crowd of about 50 mourners gathered and his family wept, seeing their son's coffin displayed on television for the first time.
"Eldad! Eldad! What have they done to you?" Hana, Regev's aunt, said.
Celebrations
While the scene was sombre in Israel, in Lebanon's Hezbollah-dominated south there was a mood of celebration.
Yellow Hezbollah flags lined the streets in towns and villages across southern Lebanon, as well as along the coastal highway from Naqoura to Beirut, the capital.
One poster read: "Israel is shedding tears of pain, Lebanon is shedding tears of joy."
Hezbollah has named the exchange Operation Radwan, in honour of Imad Moughniyah, known as "Hajj Radwan", the group's military commander who was assassinated in Syria in February.
Sheik Nabil Kaouk, Hezbollah's commander in south Lebanon, earlier termed Israel's approval of the prisoner swap an admission of defeat.
"It's regarded as being the final chapter of the 2006 war," journalist Robert Fisk, a Middle East expert, told Al Jazeera.
"The Israelis certainly lost that war, they did not get their prisoners back - not until now and they're getting them back dead. So more than 1,000 Lebanese civilians and more than 160 Israelis, most of them soldiers, all died for absolutely nothing and that's what today's prisoner exchanges prove."
Lebanon has declared a national holiday to celebrate the prisoner swap.
"This is a big day because it's the day we [Lebanon] have the liberation of four or five heroes," Wassim Manssouri, a professor in constitutional law at Beirut's Lebanese University, told Al Jazeera from the capital.
Palestinian reaction
Celebrations were also under way in Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank.
"The exchange is seen as a victory for Arab resistance," Nour Odeh, Al Jazeera's correspondent, in the West Bank, said.
Kuntar is a member of Lebanon's Druze population.
Walid Jumblatt, Lebanon's Druze leader, told Al Jazeera: "My father was the founder of a Lebanese-Palestinian coalition to fight Israel and recover the Palestinians' rights. My father would be happy."
"I am happy [too], but we should not forget the Palestinians who are detained in their own land," he said.
The Hezbollah exchange has prompted the public in Arab countries such as Jordan and Egypt - which have both signed peace deals with Israel - to question why their governments have not been able to repatriate the bodies of their soldiers.