Comment:This story appears in an Arab paper. Note that no outcry of "disproportionate force", no concern over "rights" of terrorists inside the camps, no upset with the total destruction of so many homes, buildings.Finally, in every story, even though it may have nothing to do with Israel, they insert a throw away line damming Israel-this time for last year's war. They have no shame, they have no sense of ethics in reporting-yet, people in the West actually believe what is printed-time to become much more sophisticated when reading Arab news reports.
The Lebanese army agreed on Tuesday to a request from Islamists to let their families out of a Palestinian refugee camp where they have been fighting for three months. The Fateh Islam group had asked the Palestinian Clerics’ Association late on Monday for help in arranging a ceasefire in the fighting at Nahr Bared camp in north Lebanon so their families could leave, an association member said.
“The army leadership agreed to the proposal... to facilitate the departure of the families of the fighters of the Fateh Islam organisation,” the army said in a statement.
Mohammed Hajj, a spokesman for clerics trying to broker an end to the deadly fighting, said a representative of Fateh Islam overnight Monday contacted the clerics seeking a way out for about 100 civilians.
“Abu Salim Taha contacted us and asked for the civilians, meaning the Fateh Islam families, to be evacuated and for the army command to arrange this,” Hajj said.
“We contacted the army which welcomed the offer and gave assurances for the safety of the civilians,” he added.
He said the army command - which has accused the gunmen of using the civilians as “human shields” - had also urged the estimated 70 Fateh Islam fighters still holed up in Nahr Bared to surrender and face a fair trial.
“We don’t object to their demand,” an army spokesman said. “This is what we have always asked for.”
Hajj said Al Qaeda-inspired group on Tuesday had again contacted the clerics and was in the process of counting the number of civilians to be evacuated.
“They are also trying to determine when would be the appropriate time to bring out the families,” Hajj said, adding that his organisation had contacted the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which would coordinate the evacuation.
The fighting at the camp which began May 20 has left at least 200 people dead, including 141 soldiers, in the deadliest internal unrest since the 1975-1990 civil war. One soldier was killed Tuesday.
Most of Nahr Bared’s 31,000 refugee-residents fled at the start of the fighting, with just the wives and children of the Islamists remaining.
On Monday, more than 200 people suspected of belonging to Fateh Islam were charged with murder and terrorism, a judicial source told AFP.
Prosecutor general Said Mirza filed the charges against 227 militants, 108 of whom have been arrested since May 20, when the standoff between the army and Fateh Islam began.
The charge sheet accuses the armed men of murdering Lebanese troops, including 11 officers and 120 soldiers. It also accuses Fateh Islam of carrying out terrorist acts, undermining the state’s authority and attacking its military and security institutions as well as attacking Lebanese troops and civilians.
Among those charged in absentia was the head of Fateh Islam, Shaker Abssi, whose whereabouts are unknown.
The defendants face the death penalty if convicted of terrorism charges.
Cluster bomb kills Hizbollah guerrilla A Hizbollah member was killed when a cluster bomb left over from last summer’s war between the Shiite group and Israel exploded, Lebanon’s National News Agency said Monday.
The agency did not say where or when Mahmoud Ali Mallah, 27, was killed but reported that he died while “performing his Jihad duty”. Hizbollah’s Manar news website said Mallah, who joined the group in 1998, was killed Monday but did not say where.
Mallah’s death brings to at least 30 the number of people who have been killed by cluster bomb and landmine explosions in Lebanon since the 34-day war between Israel and Hizbollah ended in a UN-brokered ceasefire on August 14, 2006.
The United Nations and human rights groups accuse Israel of dropping about four million cluster bomblets during the summer fighting. UN ordinance clearing experts say that up to one million failed to explode and now endanger civilians.
No comments:
Post a Comment