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The media seems to have forgotten to report what has happened to Lebanon and it's people after the bombing they endured and the oil that was released as a result. I did a search and found these photos about the International efforts to help the Lebanese. The first bridge has been rebuilt and was opened today.
Food is carried away as France's Transport Minister Dominique Perben, center, and Lebanon's Public Works and Transportation Minister Mohammed al-Safadi, right, hold drinks after they both took part in a ceremony to open the first bridge in Lebanon to be built by soldiers from France's Foreign Legion on a highway near the town of Damour just over 15km (9 miles) south of Beirut, Friday, Sept. 8, 2006. Some 245 French bridge building soldiers are in Lebanon to help with construction work, after the recent 34-day conflict between Hezbollah and Israel, as part of a bilateral agreement between France and Lebanon and will not be operating as part of the U.N. peacekeeping force in Lebanon known as UNIFIL, to which France has pledged to commit 2,000 separate troops.
The first car to be driven over the first bridge in Lebanon to be built by soldiers from France's Foreign Legion passes over the bridge on a highway near the town of Damour just over 15Km south of Beirut, Friday, Sept. 8, 2006.
A Lebanese woman throws rice as she celebrates the deployment of Lebanese troops, sitting atop their personnel armored vehicles, to the southern village of Teir Harfa, Lebanon, Friday, Sept. 8, 2006. On Friday, hundreds of Lebanese troops moved into a corner of southwest Lebanon, the latest area from which Israeli forces withdrew.
Italian sailors board a UN helicopter in Beirut. Israel has lifted its crippling eight-week embargo on Lebanon after foreign envoys stepped up efforts to shore up a UN-brokered ceasefire and revive stalled Middle East peace talks.
U.N. peacekeepers from Ghana man a checkpoint as Lebanese troops, in their military vehicles, arrive to the southern village of Bayada, Lebanon, Friday, Sept. 8, 2006. On Friday, hundreds of Lebanese troops moved into a corner of southwest Lebanon, the latest area from which Israeli forces withdrew.
French United Nations peacekeeper Warrant Officer David Leveque, left, of the Dog Handler Squad unit trains Set, a Malinois shepherd dog, to bite Staff Sgt. Sebastien Moity, right, during a training session in Naqura, headquarters of United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon, or UNIFIL, Friday, Sept. 8, 2006. The dogs are trained to attack but have been used during the recent 34-day long Hezbollah-Israel war to search for people in the rubble of Tyre.
Qatar's Oil Minister Abdullah al-Attiyah (R) walks with Lebanese Energy Minister Mohammed Fneish (C) during a tour in southern Beirut suburbs September 8, 2006.
An Air France Boeing 777 plane taxis on the runway after landing at Rafik Hariri International Airport, in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, Sept. 8, 2006. Air France resumed flights to Lebanon on Friday with a Boeing 777 flying to Beirut after it canceled its service in mid-July after Israeli aircraft bombed Beirut International Airport.
A Lebanese woman salvages her belongings from an apartment, destroyed during the recent conflict between Israel and Lebanon's Hizbollah, in a southern Beirut suburb September 8, 2006.
A Lebanese ship arrives from Italy in Beirut port September 8, 2006. A U.N. naval force assumed control of Lebanon's coast on Friday, lifting an eight-week Israeli blockade, a Lebanese government source said.
Volunteers remove formerly white absorbent booms used to soak up oil during a training course on how to clean up oil spills, on Ramlet al-Baida beach in Beirut, Friday, Sept. 8, 2006. French Marines who are experts in dealing with oil spills, on Friday gave a training course to volunteers and people from Green Line and Greenpeace and from Lebanon's civil defence department.
Lebanese firemen try to extinguish blazing relief supplies in a U.N. warehouse at Beirut's seaport, Lebanon, Thursday Sept. 7, 2006. Firemen struggled to put out the blaze and prevent it from reaching one of the docks where relief aid shipments sent to help Lebanese after a 34-day fighting between Israeli forces and Hezbollah guerrillas were stored. But a warehouse run by the U.N. refugee agency caught fire, and a large number of blankets, tents and mattresses inside were burned, UNHCR spokeswoman Astrid Van Stort said.
Italian soldiers and engineers of the peacekeeper UNIFIL in southern Lebanon conduct their first patrol to check for unexploded devices, chemicals, and biologicals weapons near their new base outside the village of Maraka, Thursday, Sept. 7, 2006.
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