The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #101765   Message #2069348
Posted By: beardedbruce
05-Jun-07 - 03:12 PM
Thread Name: BS: Another war in the Middle East?
Subject: RE: BS: Another war in the Middle East?
back to the topic of THIS thread- although no-one here seems to care about dead Moslems, unless they can blame the Israelis for doing the killing.



Lebanese troops pound refugee camp

POSTED: 8:48 a.m. EDT, June 5, 2007

Story Highlights• Lebanese troops pound Islamic fighters besieged in Palestinian refugee camp
• 7 Fatah Islam members surrender to mainstream Fatah Palestinian faction
• Heavy gunfire in Nahr el-Bared camp as Lebanese army shells militant hideouts
• At least 5,000 refugees and several hundred militants still inside the camp

TRIPOLI, Lebanon (AP) -- Lebanese troops pounded Islamic militants hiding in a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon on Tuesday, on the fifth straight day of the military's sustained assault to crush the Fatah Islam fighters.

Meanwhile, seven Fatah Islam members surrendered to the mainstream Palestinian faction of Fatah in the southern parts of the besieged Nahr el-Bared refugee camp near the northern port city of Tripoli, a Palestinian commander said.

It was the first sign that a major Palestinian faction -- in this case the Fatah group of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas -- responded to calls by Lebanese authorities to actively campaign against the al Qaeda inspired Fatah Islam.

From his base in the southern Ein el-Hilweh Palestinian camp, Fatah commander Maj. Gen. Khaled Aref told The Associated Press that the seven in Nahr el-Bared came over to Fatah positions there, handed over their weapons and pledged to stay out of the fighting.

Aref also said that Fatah was trying to convince Palestinian residents of the camp who had sided with the militants to abandon the fight wreaking destruction on their homes.

After an overnight lull, fighting in Nahr el-Bared resumed Tuesday, with exchanges of heavy gunfire and sporadic explosions ringing out from the camp. Troops shelled militants' hideouts with artillery fire, sending up plumes of white and gray smoke.

Since Friday, when the army launched its offensive to drive the militants out, periods of lull and fierce fighting have alternated at the Nahr el-Bared camp and its outskirts.

The army stepped up its offensive against the militants, who embrace an al Qaeda-style doctrine, rejected government demands to surrender and vowed to fight to the death.

More than 100 people have been reported dead since the fighting first broke out May 20 between the army and Fatah Islam. It is the worst internal violence since the end of Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war.

In the Ein el-Hilweh camp -- which is Lebanon's single largest Palestinian camp -- Islamic militants clashed with Lebanese troops on Monday, threatening to open a new flashpoint that could complicate the military effort to defeat Fatah Islam.

Two government soldiers and a militant were reported killed in the fighting at Ein el-Hilweh, in the southern city of Sidon, which began when the Jund al-Sham group attacked army outposts late Sunday.

The assault was seen as an attempt by Jund al-Sham to ease military pressure on their allies Fatah Islam, battered by army attacks in Nahr el-Bared.

But on Tuesday, Ein el-Hilweh remained calm. A security force made up of Palestinian Islamic factions that was set up to prevent further Jund al-Sham frictions with the army, was expected to deploy in the camp's neighborhoods that were the scene of Monday's clashes.

The bombardment of Nahr el-Bared has angered Palestinians in some of Lebanon's 11 other refugee camps and there were fears that fighting could spread.

Also Monday, a bomb exploded in an empty bus parked in the Christian neighborhood of Bouchrieh east of Beirut, injuring 10 passers-by, officials said.

There was no claim of responsibility, but a string of bombings has hit the capital area since the fighting began at Nahr el-Bared.

Ten soldiers have been killed and 44 wounded at Nahr el-Bared since Friday. Army casualties since the fighting began stood at 45 dead at Nahr el-Bared and two at Ein el-Hilweh. About 60 Fatah Islam militants were also reported killed.

At least 20 civilians have been reported dead at Nahr el-Bared, but recent civilian casualties were unknown.

About 5,000 Palestinian refugees -- and a couple of hundred militants -- are believed to be still in Nahr el-Bared.