-Caveat Lector-

Children die in convoy attack as Israel widens Lebanon assault

Inigo Gilmore in Nahariyah, Patrick Wintour in St Petersburg and Tracy 
McVeigh
Sunday July 16, 2006

Observer

Israel steeply escalated its military campaign against Hizbollah in Lebanon 
yesterday with a series of air strikes that left more than 35 civilians 
dead, including a single strike on a convoy of families fleeing the fighting 
in a village near Tyre in the south of the country that killed more than 20 
people, most of them children.
The intensification of the conflict, in which Hizbollah fired missiles deep 
intoIsrael, came as international leaders appeared to be deeply split over 
how to respond to a crisis that threatens to spill over into a full-scale 
war involving Syria and Iran as well as Israel, Palestine and Lebanon. Last 
night the Lebanese Prime Minister, Fouad Siniora, declared the country in a 
'state of catastrophe'.

According to witnesses and photographs from the scene of the worst incident, 
an Israeli missile incinerated a car and a small truck full of families 
leaving their Lebanese border village of Marwaheen near Tyre after the 
Israeli army used loudhailers to tell residents they had just hours to go. 
Pictures showed charred bodies of children strewn across the road.

UN peacekeepers recovered the bodies. Half the passengers were children or 
teenagers, according to medical sources. It was the deadliest single strike 
since Israel started an air campaign against Lebanon after two of its 
soldiers were captured by Hizbollah on Wednesday.

Relatives gathered at a hospital to identify the dead said they came from 
two families - Abdallah and Ghanem.

Around 100 residents sought shelter at a nearby UN base, but left after 
officials were unable to confirm the warning by Israel, a UN spokesman said.

Other residents had tried later to leave and were killed in the missile 
strike, the spokesman said, adding that the Lebanese authorities had asked 
the UN to help evacuate about 160 people remaining in Marwaheen. They would 
be relocated in the morning. Relatives blamed the UN for the deaths, pelting 
peacekeepers with stones when they arrived with the bodies after the strike.

"If they had taken people in to begin with then they would never have died," 
said Mohammed Oqla, who was at the hospital.

Last night an Israeli military spokeswoman said they were still 
investigating the reports of the incident.

Other air strikes flattened Hizbollah's headquarters in Beirut and attacked 
roads, bridges and petrol stations in the north, east and south of Lebanon, 
cutting the country off from the outside world and hitting Hizbollah 
strongholds including the leader Hassan Nasrallah's home and office. The 
northern port of Tripoli was also attacked, the deepest strike yet into 
Lebanese territory.

Israel's campaign has so far killed at least 100 people, all but three of 
them civilians, and choked off Lebanon's economy, including its growing 
tourism industry.

On a separate front, Israeli troops also yesterday fired several missiles at 
targets in Gaza, killing at least two.

Hizbollah fired dozens of rockets into Israel, some reaching Tiberias, 22 
miles inside the border, the furthest Hizbollah missiles have so far 
reached. They killed two Israeli civilians and injured several.

One Katyusha rocket hit the roof of a seven-floor apartment building in the 
Shmuel neighbourhood of Tiberias, a hillside overlooking the Sea of Galilee, 
damaging several homes.

There were furious political exchanges throughout the region, with Israel 
accusing Iran of supplying increasingly sophisticated weapons to Hizbollah. 
Israel claims that the device that damaged one of its naval ships off the 
Lebanese coast on Friday, killing four sailors, was an Iranian-made guided 
missile.

Tension grew when Israeli warplanes fired four rockets at a border crossing 
point between Lebanon and Syria yesterday - Iran has threatened Israel that 
it will respond ferociously if there is any incursion into Syrian territory. 
But Syria swiftly announced that there had been no attacks within its 
borders.

There is a growing chasm in the international community. President George 
Bush yesterday angrily rounded on Hizbollah for starting the violence and 
demanded Syria intervene.

At a joint press conference with the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, at 
the G8 summit in St Petersburg, he said: 'In my judgment, the best way to 
stop the violence is to understand why the violence occurred in the first 
place.' Bush, visibly angry, added: 'And that's because Hizbollah has been 
launching rocket attacks out of Lebanon into Israel and because Hizbollah 
captured two Israeli soldiers. The best way to stop the violence is for 
Hizbollah to lay down its arms and to stop attacking. And therefore, I call 
on Syria to exert influence over Hizbollah.'

But in keeping with Russia's traditional role as a counterweight to the US 
in the Middle East, President Putin added: 'We believe that the use of force 
must be balanced. But in any case the bloodshed must be stopped as soon as 
possible.'

The European Union has asked Israel to show restraint and Britain was 
yesterday trying desperately tried to straddle the divide between America 
and other world leaders at the G8 summit, by saying it would not become 
involved in the 'blame game', or 'finger pointing'.

Number 10 instead focused on trying to find what it described as a 
'mechanism' to de-escalate the crisis.

The EU, France and Russia have all condemned the Israeli air strikes as 
'disproportionate' but Tony Blair's spokesman, speaking on the way to the G8 
summit, refused to condemn the Israeli actions. Instead he said it was 
essential for the captured Israeli soldiers to be released 'and for all 
sides to act with constraint'.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006 

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