'Massacre' At Lebanon Refugee Camp

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'Massacre' at Lebanon refugee camp May 23, 2007
By Jim Muir
BBC News, outside Nahr al-Bared

Nahr al-Bared is called a camp but there are no tents here.

It is a dense urban sprawl along the coast north of Tripoli, Lebanon's second biggest city.

It is encircled by the Lebanese army, which is pounding the camp with artillery and tank fire as well as engaging the militants from Fatah al-Islam in heavy exchanges of machine gun and small arms fire.

These eruptions have been flaring up and dying away here all day.

It is not a sustained battle but it is not a truce either.

Informal ceasefire understandings have come and gone, but nothing is solid and there is growing concern now for the fate of thousands of civilians trapped inside the camp.

'History repeating itself'

Saad Touhan angrily holds out a piece of bloodied shrapnel. It passed through the stomach of her teenage daughter Manal, and wounded her in the hand as well.

There was no first aid she says, no doctors and no-one to help her daughter.

But Saad and Manal are among the few who have been evacuated to a hospital in another camp nearby.

Anisa Ismail, another evacuee, compares what is happening at Nahr al-Bared to famous atrocities at other Palestinian camps in Lebanon.

"This is history repeating itself. It's like the massacre at Sabra and Shatila. I lost my sister there. If they just want to hit Fatah al-Islam why are they cutting off the food and water and besieging us like this?¿

'Indiscriminate fire'

The hospital here is being run by Dr Yusif al-Sidi.

He describes the kind of patients that have been brought here from Nahr al-Bared so far.

"At the hospital we have many injured. There is chest injury and abdomen injury. We have five children who are dehydrated because they have been three days without water, without any food," he says.

Among the international organisations deeply concerned about the plight of the camp's civilians is Human Rights Watch.

"They've been running short on water, they haven't had electricity in three days," says the group's representative in Lebanon, Nadim Houry.

In addition to fires and attack from tanks and artillery shells, they also talk about sniper fire, so many people are actually afraid of leaving their basements and their homes to try to get supplies.

"Our second main concern has really been the use by the Lebanese army of indiscriminate weapons," Mr Houry says.

"The tanks and artillery they've been using are not very precise and when you use them in areas which are so densely populated - and the camp we're looking at is the second most densely populated camp in Lebanon with 30,000 people over one square kilometre - it's going to be very hard to avoid civilian casualties and actually they are not avoiding civilian casualties."

Back at Nahr al-Bared it is believed there are still many seriously injured who have not yet received attention.

But until there is a solid ceasefire and a lifting of the siege, they and other civilians stuck at the camp will remain in dire conditions.


it's such a SHAME that our SECULAR govts are murdering our own people just to APPEASE OUR REAL ENEMIES.........

REMEMBER.... JUST A YEAR AGO .... WHEN ISREAL ATTACKED LEBANON NOT A SINGLE TANK WAS ANYWHERE IN SITE....................... COWARD LOSERS!!!!!!!!!

terraX
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May 23, 2007
Lebanon really needs to sort itself out. This country has been through so much, it's appalling. And the only people that suffer are innocents at the end of the day.
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May 23, 2007
If these camps - containing mostly citizens - are considered "extremists" then what is the Israeli military and their recent actions considered?

The Lebanese army is a shameless little puppet....
freza
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May 24, 2007
Al Fatah (Educated and liberal Palestinians) and Israeli army have formed a coalition to exterminate all Palestinians.

It’s about time the Lebanese army also joined had with Israel to eliminate the Palestinian terrorists from Lebanon.

Every country has the right to defend it self from Palestinian radicals.
xibit
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May 25, 2007
The USA is to HELP defend the Lebanese army from Palestinian radicals. :D
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May 26, 2007
The Lebanese army just won't do anything, too much internal bickering and arguing going on.

Once again, it's a terribly sad state of affairs.
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May 26, 2007
Last Update: Saturday, May 26, 2007. 5:02am (AEST)
US arms arrive in Lebanon
The United States has confirmed it is sending in supplies for Lebanon's army to help it defeat Islamic militants in the battle for a Palestinian refugee camp.

A fragile truce held between the army and the Fatah al-Islam militant group in northern Lebanon at the Nahr al-Bared camp, where the faction is based, despite sporadic clashes.

The fighting, which started on Sunday (local time), has killed 76 people.

At least two American military transport aircraft have been seen arriving at Beirut Airport and more are expected as the Americans rush extra military supplies to Lebanon.

The supplies are believed to include more shells and ammunition, spare parts for helicopters and night vision equipment - something the militants have, but not the Lebanese army.

The fact that the supplies are arriving in military planes indicates the urgency.

Usually the Americans send in military equipment on civilian planes because of the sensitivity of any Arab government getting such support from the United States.

Lebanese Defence Minister Elias al-Murr said the Government was leaving room for negotiations but the army would act if necessary.

"What is required is the handing over of those terrorists and criminals," he said.

Mr Murr gave no details on the talks, but a delegation from the main Palestinian factions has been holding extensive meetings with Lebanese leaders in a bid to end the crisis.

A Palestinian source feared the Lebanese army was gearing up for a large-scale attack on the militants in the next 48 hours, which could spark trouble in other parts of Lebanon.

Lebanon requested more US and Arab military aid after the fighting erupted.

"What the Lebanese are doing right now is trying to bring law and order and establish a rule of law in Lebanon and that is something that is in the interests of everyone," US State Department spokesman Tom Casey said.

He did not have details on the ammunition delivery. The United States has provided about $US45 million in military aid to Lebanon over the past year.

Congress approved a budget request of $US770 million in aid for Lebanon, of which $US280 million is earmarked for military assistance.

On top of $US230 million agreed last year for Lebanon, this brings US aid until end-2007 to $US1 billion.

-BBC/Reuters
terraX
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May 26, 2007
Lebanon requested Arab military aid after the fighting erupted.
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The Shelling of the Palestinians in Lebanon May 29, 2007
The Shelling of the Palestinians in Lebanon
Nahr al-Bared Flees to Beirut


by Dr. Marcy Newman

May 26, 2007

As we walked in to Shatila refugee camp in Beirut this morning we were approached by a family from Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in Tripoli who was wandering the streets of the camp in search of a place to live. They fled the violence in their camp and made it to Beirut to seek shelter. This family is one of 100 families who are now residing in Palestinian homes inside Shatila camp, with around 30 people to each two-room flat on top of the already family living in these homes and some of these homes have no electricity.

Families fled with only the clothes on their back, and sometimes a small plastic bag of medications for people with chronic illnesses. Some left relatives behind in Nahr al-Bared because when their houses collapsed from the Lebanese army's bombing they lost their identity cards and thus cannot leave the camp or move about freely inside Lebanon. In nearby Mar Elias camp there are two families and in nearby Bourj al Barajneh refugee camp there are also 250 families (636 people) from Nahr al-Bared who are also camped on the floors of people's homes after fleeing the violence in their northern camp. Of these families many arrived with serious chronic illnesses. One woman fell down and needs an x-ray, but cannot afford it. Others need dialysis for kidney disease. Others suffer from diabetes and have no insulin. It felt ironic to be contending with the needs related to this new "occupation" of Palestinians in the north and their exodus given that today is Lebanon's national holiday honoring the end of the Israeli occupation of (most) of South Lebanon.

While the U.S., Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia sent military aid to reinforce the Lebanese army in their siege on Nahr al-Bared refugee camp, which was rekindled today with heavy shelling, we spent the day delivering humanitarian aid to refugees from Nahr al-Bared who are in Badawi camp, as well as in these three other Beirut-area refugee camps. We found three college students from Nahr al-Bared who attend Beirut Arab University and Lebanese American University whose house was destroyed by the Lebanese army; some of their relatives are in Badawi and some are missing. They had no money, no food, and could not pay their rent which is due on the first of the month; we gave them money to cover these expenses.

We sent a convoy up to Badawi with 200 tons of relief, including baby formula, diapers, and more medicine for Nahr al-Bared refugees staying in people's homes because they are not getting NGO aid, which is only being directed to the refugees living in the UNRWA schools. After assessing the situation in Shatila and Bourj al Barajneh camps we sent a doctor to follow up on the chronic illnesses and administer medications as needed. We found homes for five families who were homeless in Shatila. And we purchased hygiene and food kits for families in Shatila and Bourj al Barajneh camps, which should last each family one week and which will be delivered this morning.

The Lebanese army reported yesterday that only one Palestinian has died in Nahr al-Bared. In our brief mapping of the refugees from Nahr al Bared refugee camp, which is not anywhere near complete, we have found and confirmed the following people have been killed by the Lebanese army:

1. Montaha Kamal Khalil
2. Ahmad Daghloul
3. Ra'ed el Shans
4. Abd el Latif Al Kaza'
5. Oday Nser Ismail, 16 years old
6. Jihad Abo el Ez, 35 years old
7. Ashraf Akl, 30 years old
8. Adel Younes, a teacher, 50 years old
9. Lina Jabr, 18 years old, her house fell on her
10. Abo Leiman Bhnan
11. Sleiman Bhnan, a doctor
12. Nayef el Saleh
13. Amer Nadwa
14. Saeed Sleiman

The Lebanese army also bombed the following civilian institutions in Nahr al-Bared camp:

1. Jenin Medical Center
2. Amal Medical Center
3. Bayt el Maqdes
4. Palestine Center, Dr. Fathala
5. Khaled Ben Walid Mosque
6. Al Quds Mosque
7. Al Jalil Mosque

As the refugees continue flow into refugee camps around Lebanon, approximately 15,000 remain in Nahr al-Bared trapped for a variety of reasons. We will continue to administer aid through grassroots organizations on a house-to-house basis.
terraX
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