Lebanese troops move in for the kill
A new emboldened Beirut government is forcing an end to a 10-day stand-off as negotiations fail
Mitchell Prothero in Nahr al-Bared camp, near Tripoli
Sunday June 3, 2007
The Observer
Lebanese troops pushing ever further into a besieged Palestinian refugee camp vowed to kill any members of the al-Qaeda-linked Fatah al-Islam group inside who did not surrender.
Lebanese officers on the scene said they would continue the assault until all of the militant jihadists were dead, and warned that any civilians who remained in the camp after last week's evacuation would be considered combatants.
The threats came as a Gazelle helicopter fired missiles into militant positions yesterday and strafed buildings.
Inside the camp, however, the militants' leaders remained defiant. 'There is no way we will give up our weapons because it is our pride. We cannot even contemplate surrendering,' spokesman Abu Salim Taha said by telephone from the Nahr al-Bared camp. Those inside the camp reported dire conditions. 'The situation is very miserable ... More than 60 per cent of the camp has been destroyed,' Abu Darwish, a camp resident said.
The fighting followed the deployment of scores of armoured vehicles last Friday to break the two-week siege. As the fighting continued for a second day, smoke rose over the camp amid the constant thud of artillery explosions.
The violence - the worst internal fighting since the end of Lebanon's civil war 17 years ago - has driven up to 25,000 of the camp's 31,000 residents to flee. Thousands remain trapped. The final drive to clear the camp of militants was ordered by Lebanon's Prime Minister, Fouda Siniora, who has been emboldened by a UN Security Council resolution to establish a tribunal to investigate the murder of the former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
<more>
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,2094165,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=12