Premonition??
A Russian Artist paints:

A Lebanese photographer
takes a record, July 2006


By
Robert Fisk in Beirut
07/20/06 "The Independent" -- -- How soon must we
use the words "war crime"? How many children
must be scattered in the rubble of Israeli air attacks
before we reject the obscene phrase "collateral
damage" and start talking about prosecution for
crimes against humanity?
The child whose dead body lies like a rag doll beside the
cars which were supposedly taking her and her family to
safety is a symbol of the latest Lebanon war; she was
hurled from the vehicle in which she and her family were
traveling in southern Lebanon as they fled their village
- on Israel's own instructions. Because her parents were
apparently killed in the same Israeli air attack, her
name is still unknown. Not an unknown warrior, but an
unknown child.
The story of her death, however, is well documented. On
Saturday, the inhabitants of the tiny border village of
Marwaheen were ordered by Israeli troops - apparently
using a bullhorn - to leave their homes by 6pm. Marwaheen
lies closest to the spot where Hizbollah guerrillas broke
through the frontier wire a week ago to capture two
Israeli soldiers and kill three others, the attack which
provoked this latest cruel war in Lebanon. The villagers
obeyed the Israeli orders and initially appealed to local
UN troops of the Ghanaian battalion for protection.
But the Ghanaian soldiers, obeying guidelines set down by
the UN's headquarters in New York in 1996, refused to
permit the Lebanese civilians to enter their base. By
terrible irony, the UN's rules had been drawn up after
their soldiers gave protection to civilians during an
Israeli bombardment of southern Lebanon in 1996 in which
106 Lebanese, more than half of them children, were
slaughtered when the Israelis shelled th! e UN compound
at Qana, in which they had been given sanctuary.
So the people of Marwaheen set off for the north in a
convoy of cars which only minutes later, close to the
village of Tel Harfa, were attacked by an Israeli F-16
fighter-bomber. It bombed all the cars and killed at
least 20 of the civilians travelling in them, many of
them women and children. Twelve people were burnt alive
in their vehicles but others, including the child who
lies like a rag doll near the charred civilian convoy,
whose photograph was taken - at great risk - by an
Associated Press photographer, Nasser Nasser, were blown
clear of the cars by the blast of the bombs and fell into
fields and a valley near the scene of the attack. There
has been no apology or expression of regret from Israel
for these deaths.
The innocent continued to die yesterday in Israeli air
attacks across Lebanon. Five civilians were killed when
an Israeli missile struck a house near the town of
Nabatea. Three member! s of the Hamed family were killed
along with their Sri Lankan maid. In the village of
Srifa, in the south, Israeli air strikes flattened 15
houses which were homes to at least 23 people but - with
no lifting vehicles able to reach that part of the
country - there was no way of rescuing anyone alive
trapped in the buildings.
The Lebanese civil authorities, however, were able to
give names to the dead after an Israeli air raid on the
Bekaa Valley village of Nabi Chit; they included Ali
Suleiman; Daoud Hazima; Khadija Moussawi and her children
Bilal, Talal and Yasmine; Maouffaq Diab; Ahmed and
Khairallah Mouawad; Mustafa Jroud and Bushra Shuqr. At
least three of the names were female. Another four
civilians were killed in an air raid on the village of
Loussi in eastern Lebanon.
The Israelis constantly boast of their
"pin-point" or "surgical" precision
in air attacks. If this is true, then there are far too
many civilians being killed in the Lebanese bloodbath to
mak! e every one of them an accident. And since Israel's
target list now includes obviously civilian targets -
deliberately bombed to punish the civilian population -
the evidence is mounting that these air raids are
intended to kill the innocent as well as the Hizbollah
guerrillas whom Israel claims to be fighting.
True, the Hizbollah are killing civilians in Israel, but
their missiles are inaccurate and the West, which has
done no more than mildly disapprove of Israel's
retaliatory onslaught, must surely expect higher
standards of the Israeli armed forces than of the men
whom both Israel and President George Bush describe as
"terrorists".
Why, for example, did the Israelis attack and destroy the
headquarters of the Liban-Lait company in the Bekaa
Valley, the largest milk factory in Lebanon? Why did they
bomb out the factory of the main importer for Proctor and
Gamble products in Lebanon, based in Bchmoun? Why did
they destroy a paper box factory outside Beirut? And !
why did Israeli planes attack a convoy of new ambulances
being brought into Lebanon from Syria yesterday, vehicles
which were the gift of the medical authorities of the
United Arab Emirates? The ambulances were clearly marked
as a relief aid convoy, according to an Emirates
official. Were all these "terrorist" targets?
Was the little girl in the field at Tel Harfa a
"terrorist" target?
An example of Israel's lack of care in targeting Lebanon
came yesterday morning when an Israeli plane fired four
missiles into a disused parking lot in the Christian
district of Ashrafieh in Beirut. Their targets turned out
to be two derelict water drilling lorries which were
standing tyre-deep in weeds. Were the tubes on the back
of the lorries supposed to be missile launchers? And if
so, who imagined that Hizbollah would ever try to conceal
such weapons in a Christian area of Beirut where
Hizbollah believe many of Israel's own collaborators
live.
In Beirut and Nabatea, Lebanese s! ecurity men claim to
have arrested "collaborators" who were
"painting" houses and cars with phosphorus to
guide in Israeli jets to destroy them. At the same time,
the Lebanese Minister of Finance, Jihad Azour, stated
that 45 bridges had been destroyed across Lebanon and
60,000 families - 500,000 civilians - have been
displaced.
Thousands of foreigners - many of them Lebanese holding
dual citizenship - continued to leave the country by bus
and ship yesterday, including hundreds of Britons who
started the evacuation on Monday in HMS Gloucester.
Americans were leaving by sea, although a French security
company in Amman - SPO Middle East - was reported to have
been hired by the US to evacuate its citizens by bus at a
cost of $3,000 (£1,700) a head.
They, of course, are the lucky ones, who will finish
their journeys in Damascus or Cyprus rather than beside a
burnt convoy at Tel Harfa.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
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