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Lebanese near militant strongholds (Nahr el-Bared refugee camp)
AP on Yahoo ^ | 6/19/07 | Sam F. Ghattas - ap

Posted on 06/19/2007 7:50:26 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Lebanese troops inched toward Islamic militant strongholds in a north Lebanon Palestinian refugee camp Tuesday as mediators hinted at a possible cease-fire deal that includes the disarmament of the al-Qaida-inspired militants.

Two Lebanese soldiers became the latest victims of the battle around the Nahr el-Bared refugee camp near the northern city of Tripoli that began on May 20, security officials said.

As the battle with the Fatah Islam group continued, mediators gave indications that a cease-fire deal with the militants was a possibility.

According to a Palestinian Muslim cleric who has been acting as mediator, the deal would include a cease-fire, to be followed by the militants' disarmament.

The cleric, Sheik Mohammed Haj, told The Associated Press he had a "very positive" meeting with Fatah Islam leaders inside the camp Monday but would not give details before a scheduled meeting with the army command on Wednesday.

He earlier told the official Lebanese news agency that the militants agreed to conditions of his Palestinian Scholars Association.

The cleric did not offer more details, but the private New TV station said the conditions also include return of refugees, takeover of the camp by other Palestinian factions and Fatah Islam's dissolution.

Meanwhile, Abu Imad Rifai, a representative of the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad, told Al-Manar television that the progress was made after Fatah Islam "opened the doors for a solution" and accepted to "dissolve."

The army had said its decision to eliminate Fatah Islam was "final and irreversible," and the militants had pledged to fight to death rather than comply by the army's request that they surrender.

The fighting in Nahr el-Bared comes amid a bitter standoff between the Western-backed government of Prime Minister Fuad Saniora and the opposition led by the militant Hezbollah group.

Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa began a three-day visit to Beirut on Tuesday to hold meetings with rival politicians in an attempt to help find solution to the political crisis.

"Negative winds are blowing in every direction. The Lebanese, and we all, must help to protect Lebanon from these dangerous winds," Moussa said upon arrival at Beirut's airport.

In Tuesday's fighting at Nahr el-Bared, a barrage of six shells at a time was heard as the army pounded the camp. Black and white plumes of smoke were seen rising from inside the camp.

State-run National News Agency said three Lebanese helicopters fired 12 rockets at suspected Fatah Islam positions in the camp.

Meanwhile, Lebanon's top military magistrate Rashid Mezher issued formal arrest warrants for nine suspected militants who were detained earlier this month in the town of Bar Elias in the eastern Bekaa Valley, NNA said. The agency did not say to which group the nine belonged but said they comprise six Lebanese, two Syrians and a Saudi.

Tuesday's deaths of two soldiers brought the army's fatalities to 74 since fighting first erupted, when police raiding suspects in a bank robbery clashed with Fatah Islam in a Tripoli neighborhood.

At least 60 militants were killed in the early days of the fighting, with officials saying many more died later on. The militants have given a much lower death toll, but contact with them recently has not been possible. At least 20 civilians were reported killed.

The army has made steady gains on the ground in recent days. On occasion, it leveled top floors of buildings to root out militant snipers, and engaged in door-to-door combat to try to break the stubborn resistance of the militants who operate from behind fortified positions and target the military with rockets and booby traps.

The battle to drive the Islamic militants out has led to significant damage to parts of the camp, once home to some 30,000 Palestinian refugees. Only about 5,000 remain inside, after most residents fled to the nearby Beddawi refugee camp.

An amateur video obtained by Associated Press Television News on Tuesday showed major destruction in largely deserted residential neighborhoods.

Debris from collapsed walls and balconies littered the narrow alleys, covered with ripped electricity wires. Shells and shrapnel holes peppered some buildings. A burnt car and a parked pickup truck with a collapsed wall resting on it lay on one deserted street.

The video, taken at different periods between May 27 and June 10, showed very few residents. Six men were seen gathering around a hose to fill up cans with water. In one house, a family was sitting on the floor for a meal.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: christians; ethniccleansing; fatahislam; lebanese; lebanesechristians; lebanon; militant; strongholds; tripoli

1 posted on 06/19/2007 7:51:03 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
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A flash is seen as a Lebanese Army tank fires at a building during fighting in the Palestinian Nahr el-Bared refugee camp near Tripoli, Lebanon, Monday, June 18, 2007. Fierce fighting erupted in and around the besieged camp in northern Lebanon on Monday as Lebanese troops resumed bombardment of al-Qaida-inspired militants barricaded inside. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)


2 posted on 06/19/2007 7:51:34 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... For want of a few good men, a once great nation was lost.)
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A Lebanese helicopter flies after firing at targets at the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in northern Lebanon June 19, 2007. Palestinian mediators are hopeful a deal will be reached soon to end a month of fighting between Lebanese troops and al Qaeda-inspired Islamists entrenched in a refugee camp, political sources said. REUTERS/Loay Abu Haykel (LEBANON)


3 posted on 06/19/2007 7:52:45 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... For want of a few good men, a once great nation was lost.)
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Meanwhile, at the southern border..

A Polish UN peacekeeping soldier stands near an armoured vehicle during a patrol in the town of Marjayoun in south Lebanon. Lebanese troops and UN peacekeepers remained on alert two days after rockets hit Israel for the first time since the Jewish state's devastating 34-day war last year against the Shiite group Hezbollah.(AFP/Ali Dia)

4 posted on 06/19/2007 7:55:39 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... For want of a few good men, a once great nation was lost.)
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One OOOOoooo.. shot

Night tracers : A picture shows traces of bullets as fighting continued in Nahr al-Bared Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon.(AFP/Jinan Nour al-Dunia)

5 posted on 06/19/2007 7:57:03 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... For want of a few good men, a once great nation was lost.)
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To: NormsRevenge
Lebanese troops inched toward Islamic militant strongholds in a north Lebanon Palestinian refugee camp Tuesday...

Why does anybody go on calling these things "refugee camps"? The only thing these ****ers are refugees from is reality.

6 posted on 06/19/2007 8:13:55 PM PDT by rickdylan
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To: NormsRevenge

The three dimensional battlefield:
http://www.al-akhbar.com/files/images/p01_20070619_pic.full.jpg


7 posted on 06/19/2007 10:53:53 PM PDT by Patrick_k
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To: rickdylan

Well, with all due respect, they are and will always be refugees. There is a material and cultural impossibility they will ever be considered anything else in Lebanon unless through an operation of ethnic cleansing (of the lebanese of course), the same way as the Iraqi Christians were cleansed.


8 posted on 06/19/2007 11:00:24 PM PDT by Patrick_k
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To: Patrick_k

These guys are living in UN concentration camps, and not refugee camps. There is no such thing as a “refugee”, sixty or a hundred years after the fact. The solution to the problem is for all UN money to cease. Then the camps either become ghettos with some sort of work product flowing out and money flowing in, they let the ****ers out into the general society, or they exterminate them, one of the three.


9 posted on 06/20/2007 4:14:01 AM PDT by rickdylan
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