Justice will out.
 
B 

47 killed in Lebanon fighting

Group holed up in camp; slain man said to be suspect in German terror plot

The Associated Press

Updated: 6:21 a.m. ET May 21, 2007

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18777683/

 

TRIPOLI, Lebanon - Lebanese troops tightened a siege of a Palestinian
refugee camp Monday where a shadowy group suspected of ties to al-Qaida was
holed up, pounding the camp with artillery a day after the worst eruption of
violence since the end of the country's civil war.

 

Lebanese officials said one of the men killed in Sunday's fighting was a
suspect in a failed German train bombing - a new sign that the camp had
become a refuge for militants planning attacks outside of Lebanon. In the
past, others in the camp have said they were aiming to send trained fighters
into Iraq.

 

Saddam El-Hajdib was the fourth-highest ranking official in the Fatah Islam
group, an official said Monday, speaking on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized to speak to the media. El-Hajdib had been on trial in
absentia in Lebanon in connection with the failed German plot and is the
brother of another suspect in custody in Germany.

 

Meanwhile, another attack in a Christian neighborhood of Beirut late Sunday
raised fears of growing instability across Lebanon.

 

The violence between the army and the Fatah Islam group in the northern port
city of Tripoli and the adjacent Nahr el-Bared refugee camp has killed at
least 27 soldiers and 20 militants, security officials said Monday.

 

The clashes are a significant blow to a country already mired in a dire
political crisis between the Western-backed government and Hezbollah-led
opposition.

 

Little is known about the ideology and backing of the Fatah Islam group.
Some officials in Lebanon believe it has ties to al-Qaida, and the group has
said it follows an al Qaida ideology. But other Lebanese officials claim it
is simply a Syrian-backed group sent by Damascus to destabilize the country
after Syria's forced withdrawal from Lebanon in April 2005.

 

Hundreds of troops, backed by tanks and armored carriers, surrounded the
camp early Monday, as black smoke billowed into the air. The militants
responded at daybreak by firing back with mortars.

 

The clashes between army troops surrounding the camp and Fatah Islam
fighters began Sunday after a gunbattle raged in a neighborhood in Tripoli,
a predominantly Sunni city known to have Islamic militants, witnesses said.

 

Explosion hits Christian sector of Beirut

Meanwhile, in Beirut late Sunday, an explosion across the street from a busy
shopping mall killed a 63-year-old woman and injured 12 other people in the
Christian sector of the Lebanese capital, police said.

 

The bomb left a crater about 4 feet deep and 9 feet wide, and police said
the explosives were estimated to weigh 22 pounds. The blast - heard across
the city - gutted cars, set vehicles ablaze and shattered store and
apartment windows.

 

Beirut and surrounding suburbs have seen a series of explosions in the last
two years, many targeting Christian areas. Authorities blamed Fatah Islam
for Feb. 13 bombings of commuter buses that killed three people, but the
group denied involvement.

 

Syria has denied involvement in any of the bombings, but Lebanon's national
police commander Maj. Gen. Ashraf Rifi said Sunday that Damascus was using
the Fatah Islam group as a covert way to wreak havoc in the country, with
people assuming it's al-Qaida.

"Perhaps there are some deluded people among them but they are not al-Qaida.
This is imitation al-Qaida, a 'Made in Syria' one," he told The Associated
Press.

 

The Lebanese Broadcasting Corp. TV station reported Sunday that among the
dead militants were men from Bangladesh, Yemen and other Arab countries,
underlining the group's reach outside of Lebanon.

 

A senior Lebanese security official said a high-ranking member of Fatah
Islam, known as Abu Yazan, was among those killed.

 

Lebanese applaud army's tough response

Hundreds of Lebanese applauded the army's tough response in the refugee camp
in a sign of the long-standing tensions that remain between some Lebanese
and the estimated 350,000 Palestinians who have taken refuge in Lebanon
since the creation of Israel in 1948.

 

Prime Minister Fuad Saniora said the fighting was a "dangerous attempt at
hitting Lebanese security." Mainstream Sunni Muslim leaders, clerics and
politicians threw their support behind the army, as did the Palestine
Liberation Organization representative in Lebanon.

 

It also underlined the difficulty authorities have in trying to defeat the
country's armed groups which control pockets across Lebanon.

 

Fatah Islam is an offshoot of the pro-Syrian Fatah Uprising, which broke
from the mainstream Palestinian Fatah movement in the early 1980s and has
headquarters in Syria, Lebanese officials say.

 

It is believed to be led by Shaker Youssef al-Absi, a Palestinian who was
sentenced to death in absentia in July 2004 by a Jordanian military court
for conspiring in a plot that led to the assassination in Jordan of U.S.
diplomat Laurence Foley. Al-Qaida in Iraq and its former leader Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi were blamed for the killing.

 

C 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18777683/

 

 



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