“If we don’t get into camp today or tomorrow the situation will be really critical,” Dr Yousef Assad of the Palestine Red Crescent (PRC) told IRIN on Saturday. The PRC is the only emergency service that has been evacuating civilians from inside the camp. “We are sure there are lots of civilians injured and we need to help them. This is our only concern. Our distribution network for medical supplies inside the camp has completely broken down.”
Assad added they had reports that around a hundred civilians had been trapped under rubble in an underground bunker after their building was hit and collapsed on top of them.
Heavy artillery, tanks and a naval gun boat have encircled the camp, pounding rooftops and bases suspected to be held by Fatah al-Islam militants. Thick black smoke has poured from buildings across the camp as troops and militants exchanged barrages of machine gun fire while an army helicopter has fired rockets on targets towards the coastal edge of the camp.
Lack of access
Since the Lebanese army began heavily bombarding Nahr al-Bared camp early on Friday, the PRC had been unable to access the camp until Sunday, when it took advantage of a brief lull in fighting to evacuate one injured person in the morning. It was making efforts in the afternoon to evacuate 15 pregnant women.
Other aid agencies have also been unable since Thursday to deliver vital water and food to thousands of people who have been without electricity and running water for two weeks.
If we don’t get into camp today or tomorrow the situation will be really critical. |
According to UNRWA’s latest figures, 27,635 Palestinians have been displaced from Nahr al-Bared since the beginning of the conflict, the huge majority to Beddawi camp, 10km south.
Lebanese officials feel that civilians still in Nahr al-Bared were given adequate time to leave.
Photo: Hugh Macleod/IRIN |
Thick black smoke has poured from buildings across the camp as troops and militants exchanged fire |
“No-one is leaving the camp. The army captains say they’re even shooting down the mosquitoes,” said Mazen Fakih, head of the Civil Defence Unit that has been evacuating injured soldiers from the camp. “You can feel this is the beginning of the end. The army feels they gave the people inside more than enough time to escape.”
According to testimonies from those inside the camp, many of the civilians who remain are the sick and elderly, either too frail or stubborn to leave home.
“The people who remain in the camp are not sympathisers of Fatah al-Islam. They are either wanted criminals who would face arrest if they left or they are mostly old men and women who would prefer to die in their homes than be made refugees again - as they were by the creation of Israel in 1948,” Abu Jaber, a Palestinian social worker who has stayed in Nahr al-Bared throughout the two-week siege, told IRIN by telephone yesterday.
At least 110 dead
At least 110 people have now died from the two-week conflict; 44 soldiers, at least 35 militants and at least 20 civilians.
With Lebanese special forces having been moved into forward positions in apparent readiness to storm the camp, security analysts predict the death toll to increase dramatically in what would be the army’s first major military operation in over a decade.
The army has the guts and the morale to do this but lack specialist training for this kind of urban warfare and they will take more casualties. |
“The army has the guts and the morale to do this but lack specialist training for this kind of urban warfare and they will take more casualties,” said Timor Goksel, a long-time advisor to the UN forces in Lebanon who has worked closely with the Lebanese army.
Since Friday’s onslaught began, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has called on all parties involved to spare civilians not taking a direct part in the hostilities and to refrain from attacking civilian infrastructure.
hm/ed
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions