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Humanitarian disaster looms as Lebanese attack on Palestinian
camp continues
By Chris Marsden
5 June 2007
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The Lebanese military siege of the Palestinian refugee camp
at Nahr al-Bared in the north continues, even as fighting spreads
to the Ain Al-Helweh Palestinian refugee camp in Saida in the
south.
The siegefirst mounted on May 20 for the stated aim of
destroying the Sunni jihadist group Fatah al-Islamhas produced
a major humanitarian crisis. More than 27,000 Palestinians have
been displaced, 20,000 of whom have sought shelter in the neighbouring
camp at Beddawi, just 10 kilometres away. Eight to ten thousand
residents remain trapped in Nahr al-Bared, which has had much
of its infrastructure destroyed.
No aid can be delivered to those trapped inside. Only thirty
residents have been evacuated by the Palestine Red Crescent in
recent dayswomen, children, the old and the injured. The
United Nations Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) has said
it is concerned that large areas of the camp, including its own
compound, could be booby-trapped or littered with unexploded bombs
and shells.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has provided
five tonnes of food aid, 150 hygiene kits and 500 blankets to
250 displaced families in Sidon. But Richard Cook of UNRWA described
the situation at Beddawi as unsustainable. UNRWA has
launched a global appeal for $12.7 million to provide food aid,
shelter, emergency health care, water and sanitation and security
for the next three months.
Over 100 people have been killed in the fighting, including
20 refugees inside Nahr al-Bared and one Lebanese civilian caught
in the crossfire. The full tally of casualties is unknown because
no one has access to the camp.
Samih Kabara, the ICRCs spokesman, said Sunday, We
have been on standby since the early hours of the morning with
our... ambulances to try to evacuate the wounded, but the shelling
is so intense and we could not enter.
Bilal Aslan, the head of the secular nationalist Fatah faction
in Nahr al-Bared, stated that the residents of Nahr al-Bared who
remained were sheltering in basements of buildings or in the entrances
of old bomb shelters. Theres no food, no water, no
electricity. We cant hold out much longer like this,
he said. Medical facilities were almost nonexistent and it was
too dangerous to go out onto the streets, he added.
Amnesty International has expressed its concern over the death
of civilians and the armys use of artillery and other
heavy weapons, including tank fire, against heavily-populated
areas.
The Lebanese bombardment has been stepped up since June 1 and
it is widely expected that the army will move into the camp soon
to finish off the estimated 200 to 250 Fatah al-Islam combatants
still alive there. This would place the lives of thousands at
risk.
Around fifty tanks and armoured cars have surrounded the camp
since June 1. The let-up in bombing yesterday saw an additional
two dozen armoured personnel carriers arrive, as well as many
more troops. A helicopter gunship has also been deployed to block
an escape route to the Mediterranean Sea.
The Observer June 3 reported a special forces officer
stating: This is it. We tried to negotiate, but it didnt
work. The army will continue until they are all dead. There is
no stopping.
Chillingly, a Lebanese army commander at the scene added that
anyone who had not left during the ceasefire was unlikely
to be considered a non-combatant: We risked our lives for
10 days to allow all the civilians to escape. If someone did not
take the decision to leave, then they took the decision to stay,
which means they are not a civilian.
This flies in the face of statements by Lebanese government
officials accusing Fatah al-Islam of using civilians as human
shields and having fired on people who were attempting to flee
the camp.
Lebanese security officials were reported stating that Nahr
al-Bared had been strategically divided into three zonesone
controlled by the army, one by Fatah al-Islam and one by Palestinian
civilians and PLO guerrillas who were refusing the Islamists entry.
The response of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbass
Fatah and the PLO to the assault has been extraordinary. Fatah
has registered its support for the attack as a defence of Lebanese
sovereignty, defended the tactics employed by the army, and launched
its own offensive against an Al Qaeda-style group similar to Fatah
al-Islam.
Sultan Abu al-Aynayn, secretary general of Fatah and head of
he PLO in Lebanon, said, While it is true that we might
disagree on the means, a positive sign lies in the fact that various
Palestinian and Lebanese groups agree that Fatah al-Islam should
be readily crushed.
He denied that civilians at the camp have been targeted by
the Lebanese army, describing such claims as rumours that
the militants have been spreading to make the army look bad.
He continued: In reality, right from the beginning of the
fight the civilians suffered very few injuries. Only four civilians
were injured and most of these injuries were of minor nature.
He urged all Fatah al-Islam members still alive to surrender,
adding, I trust the army.
The violence that erupted on Sunday at the Ain al-Helweh camp
was instigated by the Islamist group Jund al-Sham, a Syrian Sunni
group hostile to Syrias government, when it attacked an
army checkpoint. A second attack followed yesterday.
There were reports that PLO fighters openly clashed with Jund
Al Sham members, with al-Aynayn telling reporters our fighters
are trying to back the Lebanese army to foil any movement by Jund
al-Sham, which has close links with an Al Qaeda-inspired Fatah
al-Islam movement in the area.
Earlier, on June 1, a gun-battle broke out between Jund al-Sham
and Fatah fighters. According to local media sources, upwards
of 500 Palestinians have already fled Ain al-Helweh.
Fatah al-Islam has said that it will spread its fight to Ain
al-Helweh and other refugee camps. This would not only threaten
more bloodshed, but raise the possibility of Lebanese military
attacks on more Palestinian camps and the entry of the Lebanese
army into the camps.
Despite the lack of support among Palestinians for the jihadist
groups, many Palestinains are furious at the destruction of Nahr
al-Bared. An invasion of the camp, in breech of a 39-year-old
agreement excluding Lebanese forces, would provoke further conflict.
Hajj Rifat, media director for Fatah in Lebanon, has
stated, If the army invades [Nahr al-Bared], I think that
there will be many more Palestinian victims from within the camp,
and we refuse that the solution be at the expense of our children
and women and the destruction of our camp.
Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, the Lebanese
Shia movement, has denounced the shelling of Nahr al-Bared and
described its borders as a red line.
For its part, Hamas, like Fatah, has given tacit support to
the Lebanese military operation. Spokesman Ali Baraka stated that
the tangible progress made by the army in clearing
Nahr al-Bareds northern and eastern edges of militants could
become a victory that could open the way for a political
settlement.
See Also:
Lebanese military resumes shelling of
Palestinian camp
[2 June 2007]
Tense siege continues at Lebanons
Nahr al-Bared refugee camp
[29 May 2007]
Bush administration endorses
anti-Palestinian, anti-Syrian offensive in Lebanon
[25 May 2007]
Lebanese army lays siege
to Palestinian refugee camp
[22 May 2007]
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