'No Hezbollah Rockets Fired from Qana'
By Dahr Jamail
08/01/06 -- -- ANA, Aug 1 (IPS) - Red Cross workers and residents of Qana, where
Israeli bombing killed at least 60 civilians, have told IPS that no
Hezbollah rockets were launched from the city before the Israeli air
strike.
The Israeli military has said it bombed the building in which
several people had taken shelter, more than half of them children,
because the Army had faced rocket fire from Qana. The Israeli
military has said that Hezbollah was therefore responsible for the
deaths.
"There were no Hezbollah rockets fired from here," 32-year-old Ali
Abdel told IPS. "Anyone in this village will tell you this, because
it is the truth."
Abdel had taken shelter in a nearby house when the shelter was
bombed at 1 am. When the bombings finally let up in the morning, he
went back to the bombed shelter to search for relatives.
He found his 70-year-old father and 64-year-old mother both dead
inside.
"They bombed it, and afterwards I heard the screams of women,
children, and a few men -- they were crying for help. But then one
minute after the first bomb, another bomb struck, and after this
there was nothing but silence, and the sound of more bombs around
the village."
Masen Hashen, a 30-year-old construction worker from Qana who lost
several family members in the air strike on the shelter, said there
were no Hezbollah rockets fired from his village. "Because if they
had done that now, or in the past, all of us would have left.
Because we know we would be bombed."
Qana had been a shelter because no rockets were being fired from
there, survivors said. "When Hezbollah fires their rockets, everyone
runs away because they know an Israeli bombardment will come soon,"
Abdel said. "That is why everyone stayed in the shelter and nearby
homes, because we all thought we'd be all right since there were no
Hezbollah fighters in Qana."
Lebanese Red Cross workers in the nearby coastal city of Tyre told
IPS that there was no basis for Israeli claims that Hezbollah had
launched rockets from Qana.
"We found no evidence of Hezbollah fighters in Qana," Kassem Shaulan,
a 28-year-old medic and training manager for the Red Cross in Tyre
told IPS at their headquarters. "When we rescue people or recover
bodies from villages, we usually see rocket launchers or Hezbollah
fighters if they are there, but in Qana I can say that the village
was 100 percent clear of either of those."
Another Red Cross worker, 32-year-old Mohammad Zatar, told IPS that
"we can tell when Hezbollah has been firing rockets from certain
areas, because all of the people run away, on foot if they have to."
While IPS was interviewing people in Qana at the site of the shelter
Monday, Israeli warplanes roared overhead. Vibrations from nearby
bombing rattled many buildings. At least three villages in southern
Lebanon were attacked in Israeli air strikes Monday.
Following the international outcry over the air strike, Israel
declared a 48-hour cessation of air strikes in order to carry out a
military probe into the Qana killings.
Despite the false Israeli statement that it was halting its air
strikes, Israeli Justice Minister Haim Ramon told Army Radio that
the stoppage "does not signify in any way the end to the war."
Israel has rejected mounting international pressure to end the
20-day-old war against Hezbollah. The United Nations has
indefinitely postponed a meeting on a new peacekeeping force for
southern Lebanon.
While defending the Israeli air strike on the civilians in Qana,
Israel's ambassador to the United Nations Dan Gillerman told the UN
Security Council that Qana was "a hub for Hezbollah", and said that
Israel had urged villagers to leave.
Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres said in reply to
questions in New York Monday that the bombing was "totally, totally
its (Hezbollah's) fault." (END/2006)
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us