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With Washington’s blessing
Lebanese Army pounds Palestinian refugees
By
Joyce Chediac
Published Jun 11, 2007 12:33 AM
June 5—Under the pretext of ridding Lebanon of groups that do not have
the support of the Palestinians, the Lebanese Army’s wholesale
bombardment of Palestinian homes has spread to a second refugee camp.
A new front was opened June 3 against the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian camp in
southern Lebanon. Palestinian families there were caught in a fierce rifle and
grenade exchange between an armed group and the Lebanese Army.
The army had already laid siege to the Nahr al-Bared Palestinian refugee camp
for 17 days, pounding it with missiles and machine-gun barrages.
While Palestinian homes are destroyed, Washington praises the Lebanese Army for
acting in a “legitimate manner” and has sent the Beirut regime
eight planes filled with weaponry.
In the midst of this massive assault, on May 30 the U.N. Security Council
approved an international tribunal to investigate the 2005 assassination of
former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. This U.S.-backed tribunal has
nothing to do with bringing justice to Lebanon and everything to do with
bashing Syria and strengthening Lebanon’s right-wing.
These combined events pose a grave danger for Lebanon and the entire region.
Unable to win in Iraq, Washington is desperately seeking to tighten its grasp
in the strategic and oil-rich Middle East, no matter what the cost to the
people who live there.
U.N. cover for U.S. aggression
While the U.N. does nothing to stop the assault against the Palestinian camps
in Lebanon, its tribunal on Hariri’s death, falling under Chapter VII of
the U.N. Charter, will have an unusual bite. Its resolutions will be binding,
the U.N. will be able to indict and interrogate officials, and military action
may be used to “restore international peace and security.”
Washington means this tribunal to be the political cover for U.S. intervention,
and possibly a war on Syria.
The Security Council resolution calling for the tribunal was passed 10 to 0.
However, China, Qatar, Indonesia, Russia and South Africa abstained on a
technicality. They objected to placing the tribunal under Chapter VII, as it
requires political consensus in the country in question. No such consensus
exists in Lebanon.
Hezbollah, which leads the progressive opposition in Lebanon, called the
resolution “illegal and illegitimate” and “a violation of the
sovereignty of Lebanon and an aggressive interference in its internal
affairs.” Hezbollah and other groups’ demands for equal
representation in the Lebanese government have fallen on deaf ears. Six months
of mass demonstrations, trade union strikes and sit-ins by the progressive
coalition, however, have ground the Lebanese government to a halt.
New threat to Syria
The U.S. utilized the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri in 2005 to increase its control in Lebanon. However, Washington is still
blaming Syria for the killing. The tribunal is a dagger aimed at Syria. It
would provide imperialism with cover to violate Syrian sovereignty, witch-hunt
its government and demand entry and inspections, much as it did in Iraq prior
to the Desert Storm invasion. These are pre-war moves.
Meanwhile, Palestinian civilians are being bombed indiscriminately and the
Lebanese Army is keeping reporters far away from the camps, according to many
press sources.
Approximately 6,000 civilians are trapped in the Nahr el-Bared camp and their
situation is “dire,” says the Red Cross. (New York Times, June 5)
The majority remaining are the elderly and disabled. “Approximately 150
people are in wheelchairs. ... Since the [latest army] offensive began on
Friday, no relief supplies have made their way into the camp.” The army
is striking deeper in the camp, further destroying homes and the civilian
infrastructure. (Aljazeera.net June 3)
Franklin Lamb on Live from Lebanon, which is podcast online, interviewed
refugees from Nahr al-Bared coming to Beddawi camp. On May 28 he said the
residents of al-Bared were reporting sniper fire into the camp from private
militias located on the slopes above army positions. Additionally, many young
Palestinian men are being arrested as they leave al-Bared, said Lamb.
Palestinians say they are main target
“Not one Palestinian in either camp or observer I know believes that the
goal is for the army to ‘wipe out the terrorists’ and
‘protect our Palestinian brothers,’” Lamb continued.
“Rather, the Palestinian community in Lebanon believes that the whole
Fatah al-Islam, a very strange case, was designed to assault their 420,000
population here.”
It is widely reported in the international press that the two armed groups in
question, Jund al-Sham and Fatah al-Islam, which are based in Palestinian camps
and recently attacked Lebanese Army positions, are not Palestinian and have no
popular standing. Even the Washington Post, no friend to the Palestinians, said
they “hide out in the country’s 12 crowded [Palestinian]
camps.” (June 4)
Appearing on the Democracy Now radio show May 24, investigative journalist
Seymour Hersh accused the Lebanese and U.S. governments of secretly backing the
groups. This March, Hersh had reported in the New Yorker magazine that the U.S.
and Saudi governments were covertly backing Sunni-based groups like Fatah
al-Islam as a buffer against Iran and growing Shia influence in the area.
Palestinians say that they, not these groups, are the main target, and
implicate the government in these groups’ having a presence in the
camps.
Interviewed on electroniclebanon.net May 28, Kaled Yamani, a youth organizer
for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in Biddawi camp,
explained that “Fatah al-Islam originally [was] here in the Baddawi
camp.” It clashed with Palestinian security and a Palestinian was killed.
“Two of those caught were handed to the Lebanese government, a Saudi and
a Syrian, and they were moved into Nahr al-Bared,” where the various
factions of the Palestine Liberation Organization do not have arms or
power.
Hajj Rif’at, director of media for Fatah and Lebanon spokesperson for the
PLO, said Fatah al-Islam “was imposed on the camps. ... From the start,
when this group first arrived in the [Biddawi] camp ... we raised our voice as
Fatah and the PLO and we said that this group poses a danger on
Lebanese-Palestinian relations. But unfortunately, no one listened to us until
we found ourselves in the bind that we’re in now.”
(electroniclebanon.net, May 28)
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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