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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Leb court charges 11 with 'acts of terrorism'
2007-06-07
Lebanon laid terror charges against Al-Qaeda inspired militiamen Wednesday as sporadic gun-battles flared between the Fatah al-Islam and the army on the 18th day of a deadly standoff. A military prosecutor indicted 11 militants from Fatah al-Islam for "acts of terrorism" -- a charge that risks the death penalty -- bringing to 31 the total charged since the gun-battles first erupted. The court action came as fighting continued intermittently throughout the day between besieging troops and Fatah al-Islam gunmen holed up inside the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp on the shores of the Mediterranean in north Lebanon. "Now there is only sporadic shooting, and the army continues to tighten the noose and reinforce its positions around the camp," a military spokesman said.

The gunmen have been able to resist the army's superior fire power, although the mainstream Palestinian Fatah faction reported that the resolve of the militants was weakening and some were surrendering.

The clashes erupted on May 20 around Nahr al-Bared and the nearby port city of Tripoli, rapidly deteriorating into the deadliest internal fighting Lebanon has seen since the civil war. Security has also been shaken by a series of bomb blasts in and around Beirut and on Wednesday police said a bomb was defused on a road leading to popular beaches in the southern port city of Tyre ( Sour) , a stronghold of Shiite militant groups.

Mainstream Fatah's leader in Lebanon, Sultan Abu al-Ainain, said three gunmen had surrendered on Tuesday and that 18 others said they had stopped shooting and were seeking guarantees to turn themselves in, leaving about 75 militiamen still fighting. There was no confirmation from the Islamist group, which has vowed to fight "until the last drop of blood."

"We have information that there were some elements which gave themselves up, but the army has not received any of them," an army spokesman said. "We have information that some elements have also dropped their arms and left the fight, as many of them are in poor spirits.

In Amman meanwhile, a Jordanian prosecutor called for Fatah al-Islam chief Shaker Absi to face the death penalty in a case involving the infiltration of armed fighters into Iraq. Palestinian born Absi, who surfaced in Lebanon last year after serving out a jail term in Syria, was also sentenced to death in absentia in 2004 for his alleged involvement in the murder of an American diplomat in Amman in 2002.

A report from Nahr el Bared at about 10.30 PM Beirut time confirmed that Absi was wounded . The report did not say how seriously he was wounded. 108 people have been killed in 18 days of unrest that has exacerbated tensions in a deeply-divided country already in the grip of an acute political crisis. It is the deadliest internal fighting in Lebanon since the end of the 1975-1990 civil war, although there have been much higher death tolls since in a series of Israeli offensives against Lebanon.

On Wednesday, Lebanon marked the anniversary of the launch of Israel's full scale invasion of its northern neighbor in 1982 to root out armed militiamen of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The fears that the unrest could spread through other camps were fuelled when deadly fighting broke out Sunday at the Ein al-Helweh camp between the army and another shadowy group known as Jund al-Sham, or Soldiers of Damascus. But the situation remains calm around Ein al-Helweh and on Wednesday a joint force from factions of the PLO, pro-Syrian groups and Islamist movements deployed in the northern sector of the camp where the clashes took place.

The escalation of violence has prompted Washington to pledge more supplies to the Lebanese army after Congress last month approved a seven-fold increase in military assistance for 2007 to 280 million dollars.
Posted by:Fred

#2  He's got it upside down..
Posted by: tu3031   2007-06-07 17:36  

#1  Dibs on that picture.
Posted by: Shipman   2007-06-07 16:46  

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