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Stabroek News

Lebanese army storms militant camp leaving 19 dead
published: Saturday | June 2, 2007


Armoured personnel carriers from the Lebanese army make their way towards the Palestinian Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in northern Lebanon, yesterday, as smoke rises from the camp. Battles ragged around a Palestinian refugee camp in north Lebanon yesterday as Lebanese troops tried to tighten the noose around al-Qaeda inspired militants holed up there. - Reuters

NAHR AL-BARED, Lebanon (Reuters):

Advancing under a blanket of artillery and tank fire, Lebanese troops overran positions held by al Qaida-inspired militants at a Palestinian refugee camp yesterday and 19 people were killed.

Artillery and machinegun fire shook Nahr al-Bared camp in north Lebanon from early morning to well into the night. At times shells exploded at a rate of 10 a minute.

Security sources said at least 16 people were killed inside the camp, as well as three soldiers, after the fiercest fighting in two weeks.

Elite forces seized three key positions of Fatah al-Islam militants and destroyed sniper nests on the northern and eastern edges of the camp.

A statement posted on a Web site frequently used by al Qaida urged militants in Lebanon to defend Fatah al-Islam.

Religious duty

"Islamists, rise up and aid your brothers in Nahral-Bared. This is your religious duty," said the statement signed by known Qaida-linked militant Mohamed Hakaima.

A military statement said some militants had fled the frontline and sought refuge deep in the camp, "taking civilians as human shields". The army said it was "tightening the noose" and urged Palestinians inside the camp not to shelter militants.

The army has been battling militants in the camp - many of them foreign fighters - since May 20 in Lebanon's worst internal violence since the 1975-1990 civil war.

At least 84 people - 35 soldiers, 29 militants and 20 civilians - had been killed before yesterday.

The Lebanese government says Fatah al-Islam triggered the fighting when it attacked army positions around the camp and the northern city of Tripoli on May 20.

Security sources said 60 civilians and 17 soldiers were wounded on Friday but could not say whether the 16 who died inside the camp were militants or civilians.

A Fatah al-Islam source confirmed the group had lost some positions and suffered two dead. Palestinian sources inside the camp said there was widescale destruction in civilian areas.

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