Terrorists don't abide by cease fire agreements?  Amazing.
 
B 

http://www.comcast.net/news/international/index.jsp?cat=INTERNATIONAL
<http://www.comcast.net/news/international/index.jsp?cat=INTERNATIONAL&fn=/2
007/05/24/671444.html> &fn=/2007/05/24/671444.html

Gunfire Erupts at Lebanon Refugee Camp


 Sporadic gunfire erupted Thursday inside the Nahr el-Bared refugee camp
where Islamic militants are holed up after refusing an ultimatum by
Lebanon's defense minister to surrender or face a military onslaught.
Lebanon's leader vowed to uproot the fighters.


Insurgents from the al-Qaida-inspired Fatah Islam militant group barricaded
in the Palestinian refugee camp vowed not to give up and to fight any
Lebanese assault.

Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora, in an address to the nation, said that
his government would stamp out Fatah Islam.

"We will work to root out and strike at terrorism, but we will embrace and
protect our brothers in the camps," Saniora said in a televised speech,
insisting Lebanon has no quarrel with the 400,000 Palestinian refugees who
live in the country.

Saniora said Fatah Islam is "a terrorist organization that claims to be
Islamic and to defend Palestine" and was "attempting to ride on the
suffering and the struggle of the Palestinian people."

Meanwhile, it was not clear what sparked shooting in the camp Thursday, as a
truce appeared to hold since Tuesday afternoon. Half a dozen soldiers
followed by an armored car and a light vehicle headed toward a forward army
position at the camp's northern entrance.

The army's first checkpoints are some 500 yards from the buildings on the
edge of Nahr el-Bared. Militant positions begin farther down inside the
sprawling maze of houses.

Despite the volleys of automatic rifle fire, soldiers appeared relaxed as
they manned their checkpoints, some smoking cigarettes while a pickup truck
of refugees _ mostly women and children _ came out.

"How many times do we have to be displaced," cried Palestinian refugee Nohad
Abdel-Al, clad in a black robe and a black headscarf.

"Have mercy on us! Have mercy on us," she told the troops, holding an infant
in her arms.

Her husband Bakri Abdel-Al said the family's two-story house had been
destroyed and that they had decided to leave Thursday "because we are now
hearing the fighting will resume."

"We've seen hell," he said.

Lebanon's government appeared to be preparing in case the showdown sparks
violence elsewhere in the country. In a sign of the danger, a bomb exploded
Wednesday night in the Aley mountain resort overlooking Beirut, a 90-minute
drive south of Nahr el-Bared. The blast, which injured 16 people, was the
third in the Beirut area since Sunday.

Police said all but two of the injured had been released from hospital.

Fatah Islam has denied responsibility for the bombings, but many Lebanese
fear more blasts if the siege continues.

Storming the Nahr el-Bared camp _ a densely built-up town of narrow streets
on the Mediterranean coast _ could mean rough urban fighting for Lebanese
troops and further death and destruction for the thousands of civilians who
remain inside.

It could also have grave repercussions elsewhere across troubled Lebanon,
sparking unrest among the country's estimated 400,000 Palestinian refugees.
Already some of the other refugee camps in Lebanon, which are rife with
armed groups, are seething with anger over the fighting.

But the military appeared determined to uproot Fatah Islam after three days
of heavy bombardment of the camp, sparked by an attack by the militants on
Lebanese troops Sunday following a raid on its fighters in the nearby
northern Lebanon city of Tripoli.

"Preparations are seriously under way to end the matter," Defense Minister
Elias Murr said in an interview Wednesday with Al-Arabiya television. "The
army will not negotiate with a group of terrorists and criminals. Their fate
is arrest, and if they resist the army, death."

Members of Fatah Islam said they were ready to fight.

"We are not going to let those pigs defeat us," said one of a half-dozen
fighters standing outside the group's office inside the camp Wednesday. The
fighter, who identified himself with the pseudonym Abu Jaafar, wore a belt
hung with grenades.

Another militant who said he was a deputy leader of the group stated the
fighters were willing to agree to a cease-fire if the military allowed them
to remain in the camp.

It is unclear how many Fatah Islam fighters are in the camp, but some of the
group's leaders say they number more than 500.

Around half of Nahr el-Bared's 31,000 residents have fled, traveling on foot
and in cars past burned-out shops on streets strewn with broken glass,
garbage and dead rats. But thousands remain behind, either too ill to travel
or unwilling to abandon their homes, and are now in danger of being caught
in the crossfire.

Though there was no fighting Wednesday, the army brought seven more armored
carriers to its positions ringing the camp in the afternoon. Army officials
refused to comment on the reinforcements.

Murr said 30 Lebanese soldiers were killed in the three days of fighting,
along with as many as 60 militants, including fighters from Lebanon, Jordan,
Syria and Saudi Arabia. But a top Fatah Islam leader said only 10 of his men
were killed. U.N. relief officials said the bodies of at least 20 civilians
were retrieved from inside the camp.

At U.N. headquarters in New York, the Security Council condemned the attacks
by Fatah Islam "in the strongest possible terms," saying they constitute an
attempt to undermine the country's stability, security and sovereignty.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also signaled her support for the
Lebanese government, saying "we are quite certain that with the resolve that
they're showing, they're going to be able to handle the situation."

Lebanon has 12 Palestinian refugee camps, all plagued by poverty and
overcrowding. The Lebanese military stays out of the camps under a 1969
agreement that allows the Palestinians to run them.

 



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