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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Foreigners flee Beirut as attacks continue

 •  Hawai'i resident among stranded

By Sam F. Ghattas
Associated Press

French youth Daniel Pierret, 6, hugs his grandfather, Mohammed Soubra, before evacuating Lebanon with his mother, background.

KEVORK DJANSEZIAN | Associated Press

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BEIRUT, Lebanon — Israel struck a Lebanese army base outside Beirut and flattened a house near the border, killing at least 16 people in a new wave of bombings, while Hezbollah fired more rockets at northern Israel. Diplomats stepped up efforts to end the conflict, which has sent foreigners fleeing by land, sea and air.

A commercial ship, the Orient Queen, escorted by a U.S. destroyer was due to begin evacuating some of the 25,000 Americans in Lebanon today, joining U.S. military helicopters that already have ferried about a score of U.S. citizens to a British base on the nearby Mediterranean island of Cyprus. More helicopter transfers were planned, a U.S. official said.

The base in the southern area of Kfar Chima took a direct hit as the soldiers rushed to their bomb shelters, leaving at least 11 soldiers dead and 35 wounded, the Lebanese military said.

The Lebanese army has largely stayed out of the fighting, but its positions have been repeatedly attacked by Israeli warplanes, undermining Israel's call for it to help push back Hezbollah from the border.

At least five people also were killed when a bomb hit a house in the village of Aitaroun, near the border with Israel, witnesses said. Israeli warplanes also fired four missiles on the eastern city of Baalbek, wounding four, and southern Beirut — both Hezbollah strongholds, according to witnesses and news reports. Another attack targeted the southern town of Qana, Lebanese TV reported.

The Islamic militant group fired rockets that knocked down a three-story house in northern Israel, but no casualties were immediately reported.

Today's deaths raised the toll from seven days of fighting to at least 226 people killed in Lebanon and 24 in Israel.

Israel was allowing evacuation ships through its blockade of the country. France and Italy moved hundreds of nationals and other Europeans out yesterday on a Greek cruise liner. An Italian ship left earlier with 350 people and other governments were organizing pullouts by land to Syria.

India also has evacuated 49 of its citizens from embattled Beirut and stationed four naval vessels off the Lebanese coast to assist in future evacuations, officials said today.

Diplomatic efforts gained traction with Israel signaling it might scale back its demands. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said two Israeli soldiers captured by Hezbollah had to be released and Hezbollah must pull back from the border for fighting to halt.

An aide to Olmert indicated, however, that the prime minister was ready to compromise on the question of dismantling the Islamic militant group. But the aide said Olmert might oppose a U.N. and British idea of deploying international forces to Lebanon.

The current U.N. force in southern Lebanon has proven impotent and a larger, stronger force could hamper any future Israeli attacks, should any deal fall apart.

An Israeli Cabinet minister, Avi Dichter, meanwhile, said today that Israel may consider a prisoner swap with Lebanon to win the release of two soldiers captured by Hezbollah, but only after its military operation is complete.

"If one of the ways to bring home the soldiers will be negotiations on the possibility of releasing Lebanese prisoners I think the day will come when we will also have to consider this," the public security minister told Israel's Army Radio.

The crisis began June 25 when Hamas-linked militants in the Gaza Strip carried out a cross-border attack on a military outpost in Israel, killing two soldiers and capturing one. Lebanon's Hezbollah guerrillas joined the fray in July, attacking a military patrol on the border in northern Israel, killing three soldiers and capturing two. Hamas and Hezbollah have said the two attacks were not related.

Dichter also said efforts to gain the release of the soldier being held by Hamas-linked militants in Gaza and the two being held by Hezbollah were not connected to one another.

Delivering an impassioned speech to Israel's parliament yesterday, Olmert said the country would have no mercy on Lebanese militants who attack its cities with rockets.

"We shall seek out every installation, hit every terrorist helping to attack Israeli citizens, destroy all the terrorist infrastructure, in every place. We shall continue this until Hezbollah does the basic and fair things required of it by every civilized person," he said.

Hezbollah's patron Iran, meanwhile, said a cease-fire and prisoner exchange would be acceptable and fair.

That was followed by a warning today from Iranian parliamentary speaker Gholam Ali Haddad Adel, who said no part of Israel is safe from Hezbollah rockets. However, he is not among the most influential power brokers in the regime.

"The towns you have built in northern Palestine (Israel) are within the range of the brave Lebanese children. No part of Israel will be safe," he told thousands of anti-Israel demonstrators in Tehran.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's special political adviser emerged from talks yesterday with Lebanon's prime minister to say he would present Israel "concrete ideas" to end the fighting.

"We have made some promising first efforts on the way forward," the adviser, Vijay Nambiar, told reporters, while warning that much works needs to be done.

One U.N. official said Nambiar's mission had "very useful discussions" with Lebanon's prime minister and the speaker of Lebanon's parliament — a close ally of Hezbollah's leader.

"They have agreed on some specifics, and this is going to be carried to Israel, and they will probably go back to Lebanon if they are a promising signal," said the official, U.N. Undersecretary-General for Political Affairs Ibrahim Gambari.

Late yesterday, Hezbollah dismissed international cease-fire proposals as "Israeli conditions," accusing foreign envoys of allowing Israel time to continue its military offensive to force Lebanon into submission.

"The international envoys have conveyed Israeli conditions. These conditions are rejected," said Hezbollah legislator Hussein Haj Hassan. "We accept what secures our country's interest and pride and dignity and not to submit to Israeli conditions," he said on al-Jazeera television late yesterday.

Also yesterday:

  • Israeli attack jets killed two people in the Beirut harbor and started a large fire.

  • Warplanes set fire to a gas storage tank in the northern neighborhood of Dawra and another fuel storage tank at Beirut airport. The airport has been closed since Thursday, when Israeli jets blasted its runways.

  • An Israeli air strike in Lebanon destroyed at least one long-range Iranian missile capable of hitting Tel Aviv.

  • Israeli fighter jets again hit the Beirut-to-Damascus highway, which has been targeted as part of a strategy of severing Lebanon's links to the outside world. Two people were killed, Lebanese officials said.

    Associated Press writer Hussein Dakroub contributed to this report in Beirut.