Scared to flee ... even more scared to stay

A growing flood of humanity is desperately fleeing the Israeli bombardment 
of Lebanon

Peter Beaumont
Sunday July 23, 2006
The Observer

A massive refugee flight from southern Lebanon was under way yesterday as 
tens of thousands of mainly Shia civilians took to the roads after almost a 
fortnight of relentless Israeli attacks.
>From dawn yesterday, hundreds, then thousands, of cars and rusty trucks 
choked the narrow mountain roads leading towards Beirut from the bombed and 
impassable coastal road. Whole extended families were on board. Many had 
been forced to abandon all they owned.

They came in taxis, buses and private cars, trailing improvised white flags 
from their windows or with bed sheets slung across their roofs - scant 
protection from the Israeli jets.

The beleaguered country is facing a humanitarian catastrophe on an enormous 
scale with more than half a million civilians already displaced and hundreds 
of thousands more under 'orders' from the Israeli military to evacuate a 
20-mile deep zone south of the Litani river.

Amid warnings from the World Food Programme that hundreds of thousands of 
people are already finding it difficult to find food, mayors in areas away 
from the heaviest bombardment have told The Observer they are being 
overwhelmed by refugees flooding from the country's south and Beirut's 
southern suburbs, and are just days from a humanitarian crisis.

With roads and bridges bombed by the Israelis and large areas of the country 
under artillery bombardment, aid workers have only been able to contact the 
most seriously affected areas by phone. They have warned that tens of 
thousands of elderly, women and children are in danger in the worst-hit 
areas.

The problems have been exacerbated by the huge reliance of Lebanon on 
imported food - almost 90 per cent - with the World Food Programme 
estimating that supplies within the country are sufficient to last between 
one to three months at most.

The UN warned yesterday the situation in Lebanon was 'deteriorating by the 
hour'. Its humanitarian chief, Jan Egeland, is due to arrive in Beirut to 
assess the crisis on the ground, as Lebanese civilians flee north amid fears 
of a large-scale Israeli ground invasion.

Egeland said half a million people needed assistance - and the number was 
likely to grow as Israeli troops continued to expand their military 
operations inside Lebanon.

There was little comfort for those fleeing through the mountains yesterday. 
Most cars were packed with families, children on adults' knees, some crushed 
eight to a vehicle. Others who travelled by taxi northwards reported paying 
$100 per passenger to escape to Beirut - or $1,000 for a family.

Those forced to leave on the open backs of trucks suffered most, exhausted, 
sunburnt and dehydrated as they crawled through the traffic jams that had 
gridlocked the Druze mountain villages.

Refugees described gruelling journeys from the besieged city of Tyre and the 
towns and villages south of the Litani river, where some 300,000 people were 
ordered to evacuate by leaflets dropped late last week from Israeli 
aircraft.

Most had little idea where they were fleeing to, only that they could no 
longer remain in their homes under Israeli attack. Most said they were 
heading for Beirut or the Syrian border.

Few wanted to stop and talk, fearful of being exposed on the roads to 
Israeli bombs. But those who did spoke of towns suffering days of bombing, 
of deaths and damaged houses and bodies buried in the rubble. They 
described, too, how only those wealthy enough or with cars could escape 
areas running rapidly out of fuel and food.

Among those who had fled Terdeeba, four miles from Tyre, was Maryam Leban, 
who, with her parents had taken refuge in a school in the Shouf mountain 
town of Daraya. 'Everyone is making their own decision on when to leave. 
Some families are left but not many,' she said. 'We had to get out because 
they were hitting the whole area. Forty-five houses in the village were 
damaged. We do not know how many were killed because we could not leave the 
house.'

Suddenly a white van draped with bed sheets pulled up, just arrived from 
Terdeeba. As those already in the school hugged the men inside, the eldest - 
who would not give his name - said: 'It was difficult. Very difficult. There 
were cars on the road that had run out of petrol. But no one could stop to 
help. People also tried to tell us to turn back. They said it was too 
dangerous. But we could not stay, so we came. There is almost no one in the 
village now.'

The majority of refugees encountered by The Observer were escaping from Tyre 
and its surrounding villages, which have suffered days of Israeli 
bombardment so heavy that, during a brief lull on Friday, the city was 
forced to bury more than 80 of its dead in a hastily dug mass grave.

Down from the mountains - on the coastal plain - the cities that border the 
Mediterranean appeared largely deserted as a vast plume of black smoke 
billowed from the ruptured fuel tanks of the Jieh power plant, hit by 
missiles from an Israeli Apache helicopter last week.

The huge movement of civilians will only exacerbate the crisis in Lebanon, 
which has already seen the flight of most of Beirut's southern suburban 
population who have suffered days of bombing.

Refugees have fled to places such as the Shia village of Keyfoun in the 
Shouf mountains above Beirut, usually home to a few thousand people. In 
winter its population is 2,000. In summer, when the wealthy Shia from Beirut 
come up on holiday to their summer homes, it rises to 5,000.

Last week the number of those living in this mountain village hit 40,000 as 
refugees arrived. In Keyfoun - as elsewhere across the country - people 
sleep crowded in school classrooms, in half-built housing blocks, public 
buildings and in the village's solitary hotel. Mostly, though, they stay in 
other people's houses - three and even four families to a home.

The refugees in Keyfoun are by and large the lucky ones - at least there is 
food to be had if you have the money - but it is full to bursting. On a 
single day 240 new families arrived; the municipality had to refuse refuge 
to any more. Yet still you see them coming up the twisting roads, cars 
packed with bedding.

Twenty thousand of those who have come to Keyfoun have come from the area of 
Bourj al-Barajneh, near Beirut's international airport, target of the first 
Israeli air raids and now largely deserted. The thin foam mattresses that 
you see stacked against shop doors sell for $30. Blankets go for the same 
price, with six or seven being shared among up to 20.

Keyfoun's water, delivered from the Barouk river twice a week into a 
million-litre tank, lasts barely an hour. Many still have money for food: 
staples like eggs and rice and sugar are becoming more difficult to find. 
War profiteering has doubled or even trebled in price.

Typical of those displaced, Ali Ghassan, 58, a former prisoner of the 
Israelis, is from Tyre. A truck driver and supporter of Hizbollah, he says 
he left only because of his young children. He wants no help from the 
outside world, only for Israel to be destroyed. 'I built my house two times 
because of war. I do not wish to have build it a third time.'

Close to the epicentre of last week's attack - a building looking much as 
locals claim it was, a half-built mosque - only a handful of families 
remain. Among them is Hasna Shahabeldeen, 40, who was in her apartment when 
the bombs fell. While the rest of her family fled, she elected to remain.

'There are only four or five families left near here. People have tried to 
persuade me to go. But I will stay. If necessary I'll die here,' she said.

Israel lifted its blockade of Lebanon's ports yesterday to allow in aid. A 
Greek warship carrying 22 tons of humanitarian supplies arrived in Beirut 
last Friday, followed by another with 14 tons of supplies yesterday. An 
Italian navy ship was expected today.

The next task is to distribute the aid: it is still unclear how it will get 
to isolated towns where roads have been cut off by Israeli strikes and 
trucks remain a target for Israeli war planes.

'Everyone is worried'

The Lebanese student: Shoghig Mikaelian, 23, is a student at the 
International Affairs at the Lebanese American University in Beirut

Just 15 to 20 days ago people were watching the World Cup and lighting up 
the skies with fireworks. Today, everyone is worried about what is yet to 
come. People have been rushing to the markets to buy as much food as 
possible. Our youth used to drive around with flags of their favourite 
political parties, now the only cars you can see are those rushing up to the 
mountains. Our family business has come to a complete stop.

We no longer open up , since the area close to the port where we are located 
is unsafe and many of our customers are from the southern suburbs, which 
have been reduced to a pile of rubble. When we have electricity, all we 
watch is the news on local channels, sometimes taking a peek or two at what 
British or American stations have to say. Despite the current disastrous 
humanitarian situation in the country, we continue to think that the more 
serious and tangible catastrophic implications will surface when this 
"crisis" comes to an end.

The schoolboy: Israeli schoolboy Eugene Webster, 17, is in a bunker in Haifa

Even if nothing happens, it affects you psychologically. My family and I are 
used to it by now, but at first it made me nervous. I'm really missing going 
outside. I used to hear the birds, but no birds nowadays. I am with my 
brother and parents. And my grandmother has moved in for the time being as 
her area is less safe. On her way here she was near where the rockets hit.

She heard three booms but didn't turn around to see the rockets. It's like 
being under house arrest. I can only hope that this will resolve in the next 
few weeks; that we will get the kidnapped soldiers back and that other 
countries won't have to be dragged into a war with Iran and Syria. We have 
enough food and water. If we run out of food my father will go to the store 
at night since rockets are not fired then. We come here when we hear sirens. 
I write my blog, read and play my guitar.

The father: Noam Shalit, right, is the father of Gilad Shalit, the Israeli 
soldier seized in June, sparking Israel's Gaza offensive and heralding the 
present crisis. He lives in Hila, near the Lebanese border

The Israelis in this area are mostly supporting the government and action 
being taken in Lebanon. Israelis are willing to suffer this burden and 
overcome it and gain some achievement. I am not a political expert and I am 
not a military expert. All I want now is to end this crisis and bring my son 
back. When this war will be finished, maybe we will be able to go back to 
the point before this began. Don't forget there are two other kidnapped 
soldiers. It's another issue that has to be handled. Hizbollah dragged us to 
a war we did not want and we did not start. We would like to live in peace 
with Lebanon. It's like a bad dream.

The Palestinian: Mark Rashed, 42, is a Palestinian engineer who lives in 
Gaza City

It's like living in a big prison. There's no power and the border's closed. 
People are not working and those who are do not get paid. Many do not have 
enough money to buy food. Children are depressed because they cannot buy 
sweets or go to summer camps or the beach. And their parents are depressed 
because they cannot provide for their children. I know lots of people who 
have sold their cars over the last weeks to buy food. We have the Israeli 
army, navy and air force all around us. You can't even walk on the street 
because you don't know who is walking behind you or driving next to you.

They could be an Israeli target. At night, there are sonic booms and air 
attacks. We never know where the Israelis will invade next. They have killed 
hundreds. The most common sound is the ambulance siren. Watching the news, I 
think it's ironic to watch the people of Israel, scared to walk the streets. 
It has been like that for us for a long time. I feel sympathy for both the 
people of Lebanon and the north of Israel.

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,1826939,00.html




------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Something is new at Yahoo! Groups.  Check out the enhanced email design.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/SISQkA/gOaOAA/yQLSAA/uTGrlB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe   :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List owner  :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/ 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Kirim email ke