Entire Lebanese family killed in Israeli attack on hospital
By Robert Fisk
08/03/06 "The
Independent" -- -- An attack on a hospital, the
killing of an entire Lebanese family, the seizure of five men in
Baalbek and a new civilian death toll - 468 men, women and children
- marked the 22nd day of Israel's latest war on Lebanon.
The Israelis claimed that helicopter-borne soldiers had seized
senior Hizbollah leaders although one of them turned out to be a
local Baalbek grocer. In a village near the city, Israeli air
strikes killed the local mayor's son and brother and five children
in their family.
The battle for Lebanon was fast moving out of control last night.
Lebanese troops abandoned many of their checkpoints and European
diplomats were warning their colleagues that militiamen were taking
over the positions. Up to 8,000 Israeli troops were reported to have
crossed the border by last night in what was publicised as a
military advance towards the Litani river. But far more soldiers
would be needed to secure so large an area of southern Lebanon.
The Israelis sent paratroopers to attack an Iranian-financed
hospital in Baalbek in the hope of capturing wounded Hizbollah
fighters but, after an hour's battle, got their hands on only five
men whom the Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, later called
"tasty fish". The operation suggests what Hizbollah has all along
said was the purpose of the Israeli campaign: to swap prisoners and
to exchange Hizbollah fighters for the two Israeli soldiers who were
captured on the border on 12 July.
Hizbollah continued to fire dozens of missiles over the border into
Israel, killing one Israeli and wounding 21, with Israeli artillery
firing shells back into Lebanon at the rate of one every two
minutes. For the first time, a Hizbollah rocket struck the West Bank
as well as the Israeli town of Beit Shean, the longest-range missile
to have been fired so far. Yet still the West seems unable to
produce an end to a war which is clearly overwhelming both Hizbollah
and the Israelis.
Hizbollah obviously has far more missiles than the Israelis believed
- there is not a town in northern Israel which is safe from their
fire - and the Israeli army apparently has no plan to defeat
Hizbollah other than the old and hopeless policy of occupying
southern Lebanon. If Hizbollah had planned this campaign months in
advance - and if the Israelis did the same - then neither side left
room for diplomacy.
The French have wisely said they will lead a peacekeeping force in
southern Lebanon only after a ceasefire. And to be sure, they will
not let this become a Nato-led army. France already has a company of
100 soldiers in the UN force in southern Lebanon, whose commander is
himself French, but Paris, after watching the chaos in Iraq, has no
illusions about Western armies in the Middle East.
Outside the shattered Dar al-Hikma hospital in Baalbek yesterday
stood two burnt cars and a minivan, riddled with bullet-holes.
Hizbollah, it seems, fought the Israelis there for more than an
hour. The hospital, which includes several British-manufactured
heart machines, was empty when the Israeli raid began and was partly
destroyed in the fighting.
The Lebanese army, which has tried to stay out of the conflict -
heaven knows what its 75,000 soldiers are supposed to do - was
attacked again by the Israelis yesterday when they fired a missile
into a car which they claimed was carrying a Hizbollah leader. They
were wrong. The soldier inside died instantly, joining the 11 other
Lebanese troops proclaimed as "martyrs" by the government from a
logistics unit killed in an Israeli air raid two weeks ago.
The obscene score-card for death in this latest war now stands as
follows:
508 Lebanese civilians, 46 Hizbollah guerrillas, 26 Lebanese
soldiers, 36 Israeli soldiers and 19 Israeli civilians.
In other words, Hizbollah is killing more Israeli soldiers than
civilians and the Israelis are killing far more Lebanese civilians
than they are guerrillas. The Lebanese Red Cross has found 40 more
civilian dead in the south of the country in the past two days, many
of them with wounds suggesting they might have survived had medical
help been available.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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