July 31, 2006
Today, Sunday, I write this from Beirut, which is being circled by Israeli
unmanned military surveillance drones, the same kind I saw so often in Fallujah.
I suppose they were spying on the raging demonstrators who clogged the streets
in Beirut and assaulted the UN building in a rage of vengeance after the fresh
massacre of civilians by Israeli warplanes in the small town of Qana in the
south.
Hundreds of the protesters ran through the building's corridors smashing offices,
walls and glass while rescue teams extracted the bodies of at least 34 children
and scores of other civilians from the bowels of the refugee shelter they were
hiding in.
"Fuck the UN! Fuck those bastards for not stopping this Israeli slaughtering
of the innocents," screamed a young protestor waving a Lebanese flag outside
the UN building, which by now had smoke billowing out of portions of it. "What
good are they if they cannot do what they were designed to do - to stop the
killing of innocents?"
This man, 22 years old, was but a baby when the first Israeli military massacre
at Qana took place. Yet the parallels of this sordid history repeating itself
were not missed by most in the seething crowd.
On April 11, 1996, Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, under pressure to respond
to a wave of suicide bombings in Israel, launched Operation Grapes of Wrath.
One week later, on April 18, while 800 civilians sought shelter from the fighting
at a UN peacekeeping base in Qana, the base was shelled heavily - killing 102
and wounding 120.
After the first Qana massacre, the Israeli military rejected responsibility
for the deaths, instead blaming Hezbollah because they thought fighters had
entered the UN base. A similar Israeli justification, albeit the very definition
of collective punishment, was given today - that they suspected Hezbollah militants
had fired rockets from Qana. After the 1996 massacre, a UN investigation found
no evidence to support the claim made by the Israeli military, and I suspect
a similar investigation will find a similar verdict this time - that the Israeli
military had no reason to bomb innocent civilians.
Astounding as this level of blood thirst is, it really cannot come as much
of a surprise. Why not? Because just last Thursday, Israeli Justice Minister
Haim Ramon announced on Israeli army radio, "All those in south Lebanon
are terrorists who are related in some way to Hezbollah."
Using rhetoric that set the stage for justifying the collective punishment
of the Lebanese people in southern Lebanon, Ramon added, "In order to prevent
casualties among Israeli soldiers battling Hezbollah militants in southern Lebanon,
villages should be flattened by the Israeli air force before ground troops move
in."
He rationalized his statements by saying that Israel had given the civilians
of southern Lebanon ample time to leave the area; thus, anyone who remained
could be considered a supporter of Hezbollah.
So of course by his definition, everyone in southern Lebanon supports Hezbollah.
I met some of these "supporters of Hezbollah" yesterday in the hospitals
of Sidon.
I met five-year-old Hussein Jawad as his stiff little body lay prone on a hospital
bed, one of his tiny legs in a cast. His eight-year-old sister Zayneb, also
a "supporter of Hezbollah," lay next to him in the same bed.
See, there were so many Hezbollah supporters in the southern hospitals that
the small ones had to share beds.
They, along with their mother Yusah in a nearby bed, covered in the kind of
shrapnel wounds received from cluster bombs, had stayed in their tiny village
near the border during the first three days of the bombing because they were
too scared to leave. The bombing got so close; they took their chances and managed
to move to another village, where they stayed for another eight days.
They ran out of food, so Yusah and the two little "supporters of Hezbollah,"
compelled by fear and hunger, along with another car containing Yusah's two
sisters, followed an ambulance to Kafra village. When they arrived there, the
car carrying the two sisters was bombed by an American-made F-16.
Then there was Khuder Gazali, an ambulance driver, whose left arm was blown
off
by a rocket fired by an American-made Apache war helicopter while he was rescuing
civilians whose home had been bombed. The ambulance then sent to rescue the
rescuer was bombed, everyone in it killed. Miraculously, the third ambulance
was able to retrieve him, only because the Apache had left.
16-year-old Ibrahim Al-Hama was surely supporting Hezbollah as he played in
a river with a dozen of his friends before they were bombed by a warplane. He
lay in the hospital bed, his lacerated chest oozing blood, his left ankle shattered
and held together by gauze and medical tape. Two of his friends are dead, along
with a woman who was near the bomb's impact zone. Perhaps she too was plotting
a rocket attack against Israel?
It's wonderful to see the thoroughness of the Israeli military, their effectiveness
at eradicating "supporters of Hezbollah." Like 51-year-old Sumi Marden
Ruwiri.
On July 14th his home in Bint Jbail was bombed while most of his family members
were inside, killing his mother and sister while they surely were strategizing
the next rocket launches for Hezbollah. When he and several others began to
sift through the rubble for their loved ones, the warplanes returned to bomb
the rescuers. He lay in bed, his back shredded by shrapnel,
countless patches of gauze stuck to his wounds. His sheets were stained red
by blood and yellow by pus that oozed from the wounds.
Alia Abbas, a 52-year-old, fled her village with five other family members
after Israeli warplanes dropped leaflets instructing them to leave their village.
She lay in bed shredded by shrapnel wounds, one of her eyes missing. 10 days
ago when they tried to flee, hanging white flags out the windows of their car,
they were bombed by warplanes. She's the only survivor. "Why did they bomb
as after we did what they told us to do," she asked me. All I could do
was clench my jaw to stave off the tears.
Apparently Alia didn't know she was a "supporter of Hezbollah," since
her family was wiped out after Haim Ramon's preposterous remarks about half
a million inhabitants of southern Lebanon.
I met dozens of other Hezbollah supporters, most of them women, children and
elderly - the kind most ill-equipped to flee their homes on a moment's notice.
They lay in their beds, many of them moaning, some crying, and others comatose
and kept alive only by machines.
The man comatose in this picture was fleeing his village on a motorcycle after
receiving the leaflets of instruction to do so, according to his mother - the
only one left alive from their family of 10.
Then I met Durish Zhair, a 43-year-old man whose home near the southern border
was bombed by warplanes. Half of his face was burned
his back horribly burned, and the rest of his body pocked by shrapnel. He sat
with a stern look on his face, distraught and confused by what happened. I asked
him where his 11 family members were and he told me, "They are all wounded,
scattered in hospitals in the south, or in Beirut."
I thanked him for his time, and we walked out of his room. The nurse who accompanied
me softly closed the door. She then said to me quietly, "All of his family
is dead. We cannot tell him yet because he is so injured. He thinks they are
still alive."
Surely, they too, along with his wife and young children were "supporters
of Hezbollah."
My head spun. My head still spins and I feel sick inside. I wonder how much
is enough? How many more will die? Over 600 Lebanese, mostly civilians, are
dead. At least 51 Israelis, the majority civilians, are dead from this.
If we look back a few years, we find the answer. Speaking before the Conference
on America's Challenges in a Changed World at the US Institute of Peace (yes,
"Institute of Peace") in Washington DC on September 5, 2002, the Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage had the following exchange during a Q&A
session:
Q: In this war on terrorism, a group that
isn't mentioned very often is one that you're very familiar with, Hezbollah.
It has killed more Americans than any other terrorist group before September
11th. I just would like to hear whether they are on the agenda sometime in the
future.
Mr. Armitage: Well, let me, for those who don't know you,
Buck, "Buck" Revell, formerly of the FBI, was one of the leading voices
for anti-terrorism activities during the second Reagan administration and was
absolutely key in some of the takedowns we had at the time. And I appreciate
the question.
Hezbollah may be the "A team" of terrorists, and maybe al Qaeda is
actually the "B team." And they're on the list and their time will
come, there is no question about it. They have a blood debt to us, which you
spoke to, and we're not going to forget it. And it's all in good time. And we're
going to go after these problems just like a high school wrestler goes after
a match. We're going to take 'em down one at a time.
And taking 'em down one at a time, or in the case of Qana today, scores at
a time, is what they are doing in southern Lebanon. While Israel and their stalwart
US backers continue to refuse pleas for a cease-fire, bombs and rockets rain
down on women, children and other innocents as they huddle in their homes, in
refugee shelters, or while they flee in their cars while holding white surrender
flags.
Meanwhile, Israeli defense sources told Israel's Haaretz newspaper Sunday that
the Israeli army's general staff had received orders to accelerate its offensive
on Hezbollah before the declaration of any cease-fire.
Yet as War Criminal Rice and her cronies back in DC drag their feet, postponing
any real cease-fire, Israel's military needn't hasten itself too much as they
go about their daily slaughtering of the "supporters of Hezbollah."
Go to Original
Oil Spill Hits Lebanon
By Dahr Jamail
Inter Press Service
Saturday 29 July 2006
Byblos, Lebanon - Israeli air strikes on an electricity plant have
released oil that has now spread over much of Lebanon's coastline.
More than 15,000 tons of oil have hit the coast after the bombing of
five of six storage tanks at the plant in the coastal village El-Jiye,
30km south of Beirut. The northern winds have taken the massive oil
slick to beaches and ports a long way up the coast.
"The Lebanese government definitely does not have the capability to
clean this up," Nabil Baz, a restaurant owner in Byblos town on the
coast, 38km south of Beirut, told IPS.. "I heard we were going to get
some help from Kuwait, but I don't know how true this is or when they
might start the cleanup process."
Byblos, whose economy relies heavily on fishing and tourism, dates to
the 5th millennium BC. It is believed that the linear alphabet
originated here.
Sitting in his empty restaurant overlooking the once scenic ancient
fishing harbour, Baz shook his head looking at the thick oil sludge
covering most of the harbour now.
"No fishermen are able to work at all," he said. "I have no
idea how our
community will recover from this. We are going to need some serious help."
Joseph Chaloub, a 55-year-old fisherman, said "the problem is there is
no cleanup, and then there is the Israeli blockade. It's a catastrophe.
People have lost their livelihood.." The Israeli naval blockade of
Lebanon is stopping boats leaving the coast or coming in to Lebanon.
The economy of Byblos that relies on tourism, like so many other cities
in Lebanon, has ground to a near standstill.
"Everything is down now, only the local markets and the refugees are
keeping our economy going," local banker Tony Ashar told IPS. "Also
there is no U.S. currency in our banks to give to people when they want
to make a withdrawal."
Ashar said dollars have been in short supply since Israeli warplanes
bombed Beirut airport. Lebanese banks keep dollars for tourists since
the value of the Lebanese currency is low and fluid.
"We usually have U.S. currency flown in, but now there's a big concern
that we may have to limit the amount of U.S. dollars we can give out,"
Ashar said. "So that makes it difficult for people to travel, which is
a
big problem since so many people are leaving the country now."
In Beirut, Lebanese immigration authorities are working 18 hours a day
and issuing an average of 5,000 passports daily as the flow of people
out of Lebanon continues.
Mohamad Yasouk, an information technology engineer, said the already
weakened economy of Lebanon would not survive if the war lasted another
two weeks.
"With the oil spill and the war, all of the tourists are gone," he
said.
"I came to Byblos from south Beirut since my home was bombed, yet even
here two nights ago the Israelis bombed an Army radar nearby. The same
one they bombed two weeks ago."
The tourist beaches off the coast of Beirut stand empty as well. Pools
of oil slosh up with the waves, staining the beach and the rocks.
"If we tried to fish, the Israelis would kill us," said Hafez, a
Palestinian fisherman. "But nobody would eat the fish anyway even if we
could fish ... Now we wait for a miracle, something to take this oil away
and stop this war."
Dahr Jamail is an independent journalist who has reported for the Guardian, the Independent, and the Sunday Herald. He now writes regularly for Inter Press Service and Truthout. He maintains a web site at dahrjamailiraq.com.