http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20070521/news/news4.html





Fifty dead as Lebanese troops battle


>From correspondents in Nahr Al-Bared, Lebanon

May 21, 2007 08:10am

Article from: Reuters

LEBANESE troops battled Islamist militants based in a Palestinian refugee
camp overnight and 50 people were killed in the clashes, Lebanon's bloodiest
internal fighting since the 1975-90 civil war.

Twenty-five soldiers and 15 militants died in the clashes which erupted
before dawn at Nahr al-Bared camp and the nearby Sunni Muslim city of
Tripoli, in north Lebanon.

A cabinet minister said the fighting with Fatah al-Islam, which the
government says is backed by Syria, seemed timed to try to derail UN moves
to set up an international court to try those suspected of carrying out
political killings in Lebanon.

n Beirut, an explosion under a car parked by a shopping mall in the mainly
Christian east of the capital killed a woman, a security source said.
Witnesses said six people were also wounded by broken glass. 

Four Fatah al-Islam members were charged with bombings in the capital
earlier this year, but it was not immediately clear if there was any link
between today's explosion and the fighting in the north.

Security sources said at least 15 militants were killed when troops stormed
buildings in Tripoli, where some of them were holed up. Four militants who
were earlier thought to have been killed in the camp had turned themselves
in, they said.

Palestinian officials in the camp, home to 40,000 refugees, said at least 10
civilians were killed and 50 wounded. Lebanese officials could not say
whether militants inside the camp had been killed. 

The army blasted militant positions in the camp with tank, mortar and
machinegun fire, a military source said.

More than 20 soldiers were wounded overall, the source said.

The International Committee of the Red Cross appealed for access to the
camp.

"We haven't been able (to go in), because of the heavy fighting. We don't
know how many wounded there are inside," spokeswoman Virginia Dela Guardia
said.

Fatah al-Islam, a Sunni group, said the army had launched an unprovoked
attack.

"We warn the Lebanese army of the consequences of continuing the provocative
acts against our mujahideen who will open the gates of fire ... against (the
army) and against the whole of Lebanon," it said in a statement faxed to
Reuters. 

The authenticity of the statement could not be verified.

The army had tightened its grip around Nahr al-Bared after four Fatah
al-Islam members, all Syrian nationals, were charged with planting bombs on
two buses in a Christian area near Beirut in February. Three civilians were
killed in those attacks.

Fatah al-Islam is known to have Lebanese, Syrians and Palestinians in its
ranks. Its leader is a Palestinian.

Cabinet minister Ahmad Fatfat, speaking in Tripoli, said the violence was
part of efforts to sabotage UN moves to set up the international tribunal to
try suspects in the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik
al-Hariri.

A UN inquiry has implicated Syria and Lebanese officials in the Hariri
killing. Damascus denies any involvement. 

Syria also denies any link to Fatah al-Islam, whose leader, Shaker al-Abssi,
says the group has no organisational links to al-Qaeda but agrees with its
aim of fighting "infidels".

Syria said it had closed two border crossings to north Lebanon due the
violence. The main crossing remained open. 

Mr Fatfat told Lebanon's pro-government Future TV: "There is someone trying
to create security chaos to say to world public opinion: 'Look, if the
tribunal is established, there will be security trouble in Lebanon'." 

The United States, France and Britain last week circulated a draft UN
resolution that would unilaterally set up the court, which is at the heart
of a political crisis in Lebanon.

The army said the clashes began when Fatah al-Islam attacked army posts
around the camp and in northern Tripoli. 

It sent reinforcements to the outskirts of Nahr al-Bared, but did not push
inside, in line with a 1969 Arab agreement bars Lebanese security forces
from Palestinian camps.

Television footage of a Tripoli building stormed by the army showed corpses,
some charred, on a floor strewn with rubble.

Security forces had also been trying to arrest Fatah al-Islam members
suspected of robbing a bank on Saturday, security sources said. A group of
them had been detained. 

Fatah al-Islam was formed last year by fighters who broke off from the
Syrian-backed Fatah Uprising group.

.
 
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