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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Deal reached to allow families of militants to leave camp
2007-08-25
A deal was reached with Islamic extremists holed up in a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon to allow their families to leave the besieged area, a Muslim clergyman and a senior military official said Friday.
Bad translation of the source documents. The actual agreement was for "a battalion of children, to be accompanied by an appropriate number of persons wearing burkas."
Sheik Mohammed al-Haj of the Paleo Scholars' Association said he was contacted Friday by Fatah al Islam spokesman Abu Salim Taha, requesting his mediation with the Lebanese army command for a truce to allow the remaining civilians — most of them relatives of the fighters — to leave the refugee camp. The Association has been mediating between the militants and the army since fighting broke out in the camp on May 20.

The senior military official confirmed that a deal has been reached with Fatah al Islam fighters to allow their civilian relatives to leave the camp. "There is an agreement that they (the families) come out today ... If they're being truthful, we are ready," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity according to military rules. "We have taken all the necessary arrangements," he added, declining to elaborate.
"Each kiddie or its guardian may carry personal sidearms and enough ammunition for the first week of school."
Witnesses near the Nahr el-Bared camp in north Lebanon said the army seemed to have halted its bombardment as of Friday morning, suggesting that a truce to evacuate the families may be in place. A number of Muslim sheiks from the Paleo Scholars' Association have gathered at the southern entrance to the camp from where the civilians were expected to emerge, they added.

For weeks, the army has been calling on the estimated 100 women and children still in the camp to leave, clearing the way for a final military assault to eradicate the remaining Fatah al Islam fighters there. In the last two weeks, the Lebanese army has augmented its months-old artillery bombardment of the camp with massive 1000-pound bombs dropped from helicopters, which may have prompted the fighters to ask for the truce.

The camp's more than 31,000 civilian residents fled in the first weeks of the fighting and the army estimates only 70 Fatah Islam fighters remain, down from 360 when the fighting began. The army has refused to halt its offensive until the militants completely surrender, while, until now, the Islamists have vowed to fight to the death.
Posted by:Fred

#1  Double check anyone wearing a burkah.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2007-08-25 12:08  

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