'It is madness. Why is no one doing anything to stop this?'
Refugees head for safety of Beirut as Israeli jets destroy roads and
bridges
By Nicholas Blanford in Tyre
07/18/06 "The
Times' -- -- AS DIRECTOR of the Jabel Amel hospital in
Tyre, Ahmad Mrowe is no stranger to the violence that has racked
this area for decades.
But as casualties soared and even ambulances and his own hospital
were targeted by Israeli warplanes, the doctor said that the latest
Israeli onslaught was the worst he had ever seen. “It is
incomparable, much worse than anything before,” he said, as he stood
in a sweltering corridor packed with relatives of the victims.
A humanitarian disaster is unfolding in southern Lebanon where the
Israeli war machine, determined to destroy Hezbollah once and for
all, has been pounding the scruffy villages that dot these stony
hills and valleys.
It has warned Lebanese civilians to leave the area, and tens of
thousands have been streaming north in battered cars, eight, nine or
ten to a vehicle, to escape the fighting. But the Israelis have also
destroyed the main roads and all the bridges over the Litani river,
forcing many of the refugees to abandon their cars and wade across.
Jan Egeland, the UN Emergency Relief Co-ordinator, spoke yesterday
of an imminent humanitarian crisis and feared that the destruction
of water, sewage and other infrastructure could compound the
problem. The UN force in southern Lebanon said it could no longer
deliver aid because the Israelis had failed to guarantee its convoys
safe passage.
The Israeli offensive has been largely conducted away from the eyes
of the foreign media, which have been stuck north of the Litani. To
reach Tyre, normally an hour’s drive from Beirut down the coastal
highway, required a tortuous and tense five-hour ordeal via the
Chouf mountains yesterday. The winding mountain roads were clogged
with traffic coming the other way as refugees inched to the relative
safety of Beirut, where commandeered schools were overflowing with
the displaced.
But beyond the southern market town of Nabatieh, the roads were
ominously empty and the skies filled with the roar of Israeli jets
and the whine of drones. A nerve-racking half-hour drive along an
old road beside the Litani led to a newly built earthen causeway
across the river, now the only lifeline connecting the south to the
rest of the country.
The Israeli military said that it was hunting down Lebanon’s
Hezbollah guerrillas, but it is the civilian population that is
bearing the brunt of the conflict. Survivors interviewed by The
Times said that Israel was bombing homes, schools, the centres of
villages and towns and vehicles including ambulances. Even the Jabel
Amel hospital was struck early on Sunday morning by a missile that
demolished an entire wing and killed a family of nine.
Dr Mrowe said: “We have recovered five of the bodies. There are
another four under the rubble. If they hit the hospital again it
will be a massacre.”
By late yesterday his hospital alone had received 196 casualties, 25
of them dead.
One young boy, Walid Abu Zeidi, writhed on his hospital bed, his
small body daubed with iodine and his arm wrapped in a bandage. He
and his friends had been swimming in the Litani when a missile
exploded nearby. “I saw the flash of the missile, then I was thrown
down,” he said. In the basement corridors other children sat,
wide-eyed with fright, with their mothers and sisters.
Nimr Rmeity, 3, had a bandage wrapped around his head. He was struck
by shrapnel on Sunday when a missile blew up a nearby house, killing
his uncle and wounding 16 others.
A family from Shaytieh, south of Tyre, sat in numb silence next to
each other. “This is Israeli terror, but we will resist,” a
headscarfed teenage girl said softly.
Hundreds of foreign tourists who were visiting Tyre’s archaeological
ruins are also trapped. “What are the Israelis doing? It is madness.
Why isn’t the world doing anything to stop this?” asked Anne-Marie
Casales, a French woman on holiday with her teenage daughter and
son.
The bombing has generated fear and deep anger that the West has not
intervened to halt the bloodshed. “Bush and Blair are breeding
future generations of suicide bombers here. You will see. Is it
right to destroy a country for just two soldiers?” asked Mustafa
Safieddine.
Israeli warplanes renewed attacks on Beirut’s southern suburbs late
last night. Strikes also killed at least six people in a southern
Lebanon village.
Copyright 2006 Times Newspapers Ltd.