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الطريق
إلى القدس (عبر لبنان) بقلم:
روبرت فيسك الانديبندنت
البريطانية - 23/5/2007 إذا ما استمر حصار مخيم نهر
البارد فانه لن يكون من السهل
السيطرة على الجماعات
الفلسطينية الموجودة في بيروت
وجنوب لبنان. ولن يكون باستطاعة
الجيش اللبناني أن يكون مرناً
أكثر من ذلك Robert
Fisk: The road to Jerusalem (via Lebanon) Inspired
by al-Qa'ida, a hitherto little-known militant group is
behind the outbreak of bloody violence which has left
scores dead Published: They
came into That
the men of Fatah al-Islam should believe that the road
to Jerusalem lay through the Lebanese city of Tripoli
and might be gained by killing almost 30 Lebanese
soldiers - many of them Sunni Muslims like themselves,
four of whom it now emerges had their heads cut off -
was one of the weirder manifestations of an organisation
which, while it denies being part of al-Qa'ida, is
clearly sympathetic to the "brothers" who
serve the ideas of Osama bin Laden. Last
night their gunmen in Nahr el-Bared offered a ceasefire
to the Lebanese troops surrounding them after doctors
had pleaded for a truce in which the dead and wounded
could be cleared from the streets. It was an equally odd
idea from a group which only 24 hours earlier had
promised to open the "gates of hell" all over
Lebanon and "shoot to the last bullet" if the
army did not halt its fire. The nature of their
politics, however, is less sinister than their savagery.
At least two, it now transpires, blew themselves up with
explosive belts in One
survivor recalled that a dying member of Fatah-al-Islam
spent his last moments reading to him from the Koran. The
organisation - we still do not know if they have 300
armed men at their disposal - clearly took some
inspiration from the famous declaration of al-Qa'ida's
Ayman al-Zawahiri that And
he added that "we are neither allied to a regime or
any group existing on this earth." Absi, it should
be added, is wanted in If
it is, then But
why Was
it Certainly,
we know that one of the dead - possibly two - are sons
of a 60-year-old Lebanese man from If
these internecine Palestinian disputes appear tiresome,
it should be remembered that many have their origins in
the Lebanese civil war, when Arafat's PLO fought on the
Muslim side against Christian Maronite militia. When
Lebanese troops arrested Moamar Abdullah al-Awami, a
Yemeni, in Sidon in 2003 and accused him of plotting to
blow up a McDonald's restaurant, Awami - who used the
nom de guerre "Ibn al-Shaheed" (son of the
martyr) - claimed to have met three al-Qa'ida operatives
in Ein el-Helweh. Several Lebanese fundamentalists
involved in a battle against the Lebanese army in 2000
at Sir el-Dinniye, joined a Palestinian group known as
Jund al-Shams (Soldier of Damascus) whose leader,
Mohamed Sharqiye, arrived in Sidon 10 years ago - and
here the story comes full circle - from the same Nahr
el-Bared camp where Fatah el-Islam was established in
the summer of last year. It
is too simple to claim that this is Interviewed
earlier this year, another of Fatah al-Islam's leaders
who called himself "Abu Mouayed", insisted
that "we are not in contact with other Islamists...
we are not at the point of recruiting fighters, but
those who want to work with us and struggle against the
Jews are welcome". He also threatened to attack the
enlarged UN force in southern The
army and the Internal Security Force - a mild version of
a paramilitary police unit - appear to have caught 11 of
the gunmen before they could kill themselves and they
are now under interrogation (a process that is
definitely not going to be mild, although one of the men
was seriously wounded). Photographers managed to catch
pictures of one of the captured men as he was grabbed by
soldiers after one of their comrades had been killed.
But is it likely that these fierce - vicious - warriors
are going to talk when they were all prepared to die? The
army, too, has its feelings. About half of their dead
appear to be Sunni Muslims, and many of them come from
northern This
is a part of the country where revenge killings have
often been a feature of social anger and once the
battles at Nahr al-Bared are over, there will be
families desperate to make up for the loss of husbands
and sons, especially those who were done to death so
cruelly. Back at Sir el-Dinniye in 2000, there were no
revenge deaths after 11 soldiers were killed. But some
of the gunmen who killed them seven years ago are now
themselves - and here we go full circle again - in the
Ein el-Helweh camp in The
PLO's Fatah movement has called its namesake "a
gang of criminals" - a wise precaution given the
suppressed fury of the Lebanese that the Palestinians
allowed the group to be created in the northern refugee
camp. In Ein el-Helweh, the PLO are on the streets,
ensuring that there is no recurrence, although one
Palestinian Islamist did open fire into the air on
Monday in anger at the death of his "brothers"
who are fighting the army. If
the siege of Nahr el-Bared continues, however, it may
not be so easy to control the Palestinian groups in http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/article2573297.ece ----------------- نشرنا
لهذه المقالات لا يعني أنها
تعبر عن وجهة نظر المركز كلياً
أو جزئياً
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