Untold story of the massacre of Marjayoun leaves blame on both sides
of the border
By Robert Fisk
08/23/06 "The
Independent" -- - -There are few marks on the road
where the missiles hit the innocents of Marjayoun. But there are the
memories of what happened immediately after the Israeli airstrike on
the convoy of 3,000 people after dark on 11 August: a 16-year old
Christian girl screaming "I want my Daddy" as her father's mutilated
body lay a few metres away from her; the town mukhtar discovering
that his wife, Collette, had been decapitated by one of the Israeli
missiles; the Lebanese Red Cross volunteer who went into the
darkness of wartime Lebanon to give water and sandwiches to the
refugees and was cut down by another missile, and whose friends
could not reach him to save his life.
There are those who break down when they recall the massacre at Joub
Jannine - and there are the Israelis who gave permission to the
refugees to leave Marjayoun, who specified what roads they should
use, and who then attacked them with pilotless, missile-firing drone
aircraft. Five days after being asked to account for the tragedy,
they had last night still not bothered to explain how they killed at
least seven refugees and wounded 36 others just three days before a
UN ceasefire came into effect.
It is one of the untold stories of the Israeli-Hizbollah war; there
are others - infinitely more bloody - but the ultimate tragedy of
these largely Christian refugees involved a raft of Lebanese
officers and ministers, the Prime Minister of Lebanon, the US
ambassador and the Israeli Defence Ministry.
It all began on 10 August when the Israelis staged a small ground
offensive into Lebanon after a month of massive bombing of Lebanese
villages in the south. Brig-Gen Adnan Daoud, commanding a mixed
force of 350 Lebanese paramilitary police and soldiers at the
barracks in the pretty Christian town of Marjayoun, found a man at
the gate at 9am, an Israeli officer calling himself Col Ashaya.
Brig-Gen Daoud, whose men were not fighting the Israelis, called the
Lebanese Interior Minister, Ahmad Fatfat, who "endorsed" - Fatfat's
word - Daoud's decision to let him in. "Ashaya" spent four hours
looking round the barracks to assure himself that there were no
Hizbollah members there. Then he left. Daoud put a white flag on the
guardhouse.
But at 4pm that afternoon, an Israeli tank unit approached the
barracks and started to shoot their way in. Daoud was again told by
Fatfat to let in the Israelis who, according to Daoud, informed him
that "we are the occupiers and we are in charge". An Israeli officer
then locked Daoud into a room.
Thousands of Christians in Marjayoun now feared for their lives.
According to several aid workers, Hizbollah were firing rockets from
behind the town's hospital, which was immediately abandoned by the
Lebanese Red Cross. The inhabitants believed, with good reason, that
Hizbollah's missiles would be redirected from Israel on to Marjayoun
itself now that the town had been taken over by Israeli troops and
tanks.
Locked in his room, Daoud now called Fatfat again and Fatfat called
the Lebanese Prime Minister, Fouad Siniora, who, by chance, was
talking to the US ambassador to Beirut, Jeffrey Feltman. Feltman -
either via the State Department or directly to the US embassy in Tel
Aviv - told his diplomats to call the Israeli Defence Ministry; and
they swiftly replied that there should be no Israeli troops in
Daoud's barracks. But the Israelis in Marjayoun refused to believe
what Daoud told them.
Marjayoun's inhabitants, however, were now in a state of panic and
Daoud called Fatfat at 7pm to start arranging for a refugee convoy
north from Marjayoun to Beirut. The Lebanese government, according
to Fatfat, called the United Nations command in southern Lebanon at
5am the next day, 11 August, to seek clearance from the Israelis to
allow the thousands of refugees to be convoyed north. The UN,
according to the government in Beirut, subsequently notified Gen
Abdulrahman Shaiti, assistant to the head of Lebanese military
intelligence, that the convoy had permission from the Israelis to
travel.
Two UN armoured vehicles, crewed by Indian troops, subsequently
turned up in Marjayoun to find at least 3,000 people, including Shia
Muslim refugees from the surrounding, devastated villages, waiting
to leave. "We had a total agreement that they would go out to the
Bekaa [Valley] from [Alain] Pellegrini [the UN commander]," Fatfat
says. "The road was also agreed." But there were delays. Part of the
road ahead had been heavily bombed and had to be repaired. It was
4pm before the convoy crept slowly out of Marjayoun, Daoud's 350
soldiers in the lead. The UN vehicles then abandoned the convoy at
Hasbaya, the northern limit of UN operations, leaving the refugees
dangerously exposed. The UN had already warned the Lebanese
authorities that it was late for the convoy to leave.
"They went so slowly, I was enraged," a relief worker recalls.
"People at friendly villages would come out and give the refugees
food and water and want to talk to them and people would stop to
greet old friends as if this was tourism. The convoy was only going
at five miles an hour. It was getting dark." The 3,000 refugees now
trailed up the Bekaa after nightfall and were approaching the
ancient Kifraya vineyards at Joub Jannine when disaster struck them
at 8pm.
"The first bomb hit the second car," Karamallah Dagher, a reporter
for Reuters, said. "I was half way back down the road and my friend
Elie Salami was standing there, asking me if I had any spare
gasoline. That's when the second missile struck and Elie's head and
shoulders were blown away. His daughter Sally is 16 and she jumped
from the car and cried out: 'I want my Daddy, I want my Daddy.' But
he was gone." Speaking of the killings yesterday, Dagher breaks down
and cries. He tried to carry his arthritic mother from his own car
but she complained that he was hurting her so he put her back in the
passenger seat and sat beside her, waiting for a violent death which
mercifully never came. But it arrived for Collette Makdissi
al-Rashed, wife of the mukhtar, who was beheaded in her Cherokee
jeep, and for a member of the Tahta family from from Deir Mimas, and
for two other refugees, and for a Lebanese soldier and for
35-year-old Mikhael Jbaili, the Red Cross volunteer from Zahle, who
was blasted into the air when a rocket exploded behind him.
"There was panic," the Marjayoun mayor, Fouad Hamra, said. "Many
people drove away. They had a clearance; everything should have been
OK. If Hizbollah was supposed to be carrying weapons at night, they
would have been travelling in the opposite direction!"
Who flew the drones? An Israeli soldier of the invasion force? A
nameless officer in the Israel Defence Ministry in Tel Aviv? The
Israelis knew a civilian convoy was on the road. Yet they sent their
pilotless machines to attack it. Why? Last night, the Israeli
Defence Ministry had not responded to inquiries from reporters who
asked for the answer last Friday.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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