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Desolation awaits returning Paleo refugees | |||||||
2007-10-11 | |||||||
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At the main gate, the trickle of refugees the army had permitted to go home braved a gantlet of hecklers, razor wire and soldiers who searched their bags of food and clothing. “All that was left of my room was the four walls,” said Maysa al-Sharaf, 23, who found piles of rubble filling each room of her home. “I was hoping to find something — at least my favorite pair of black trousers. But there was nothing.” She was so devastated that she returned to her temporary lodgings in another camp, her cellphone full of fuzzy images of destruction she had snapped despite army warnings that photography was prohibited. “This is my friend’s living room,” she said, showing a photograph of upturned, broken furniture and walls punctured by shells. “She hasn’t seen it yet.”
To build this model, the government must balance the demands of the refugees against those of the Lebanese host population, which is strapped by unemployment and economic stagnation. “This is going to be a model, so the Palestinians see they are better off under the authority of the Lebanese government,” said Khalil Makkawi, the leader of a government committee charged with negotiating between the government and the Palestinians. Tensions run high between Lebanese, who blame the Palestinians for turning a blind eye to violent jihadists like Fatah al Islam, and Palestinians, who say the Lebanese trap them in poverty and confine them in camps with no productive distractions for the young. The government’s effort to improve the situation has been more a model of heightened conflict than of coexistence. The Lebanese Army drove out Fatah al Islam, a small group of insurgents, on Sept. 2, after three months of fighting that killed 157 soldiers and more than 100 militants. The fight at Nahr al Bared spread only briefly to one other camp because there was little popular support for the Islamist faction. But if the Lebanese government threatens the autonomy of other armed Palestinian factions, including Fatah and Hamas, it could meet much stiffer and wider resistance.
![]() Some refugees have seen their furniture and televisions on sale in local markets, he said. The military denies that it allowed soldiers or outsiders to loot the camp, but the accusations have heightened tensions between the military and the Palestinians. “My three sons were soldiers, and they died fighting here,” a woman at the camp gate shouted at the Palestinians. “They’ll never come home. Why should you be allowed to go home?” It was unclear how many of the refugees — a tiny fraction of the 32,000 displaced from the camp by the fighting — would be able to remain in their homes, which also had widespread damage from bullets, shells and shrapnel. Ahmed Bashir Abu Rabih was told by the United Nations agency in charge of the camps that his house was safe for habitation, but on Wednesday he found the road home blocked by rubble. He stayed with a cousin in a less damaged part of the camp. The standoff at the camp prompted a backlash against the Palestinians and exacerbated their fears that they could lose what little autonomy they had to work and travel outside of their camps. Palestinians are not allowed to hold most skilled jobs and must have permission from the Lebanese military to leave their camps. But inside, Palestinian factions have free rein, including the right to bear arms.
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Posted by:Seafarious |
#9 A little sympathy for their plight, please... |
Posted by: Ricky bin Ricardo (Abu Babaloo) 2007-10-11 22:24 |
#8 Desolation? I call it peace. |
Posted by: Excalibur 2007-10-11 18:22 |
#7 There are perfectly fine camps waiting in Syria. |
Posted by: Spatle de Medici2031 2007-10-11 17:34 |
#6 Allan loves the Paleos! Look how he takes care of them. |
Posted by: Brett 2007-10-11 15:49 |
#5 Lol! Zen, I think these two are among your funniest/best comments ever. Classic!! |
Posted by: Scooter McGruder 2007-10-11 15:16 |
#4 UNWRA intends to keep the Paleos wretched and seething. You give UNWRA far too much credit, Sea. They couldn't intend anything if it was the intendingest day of their lives and they had an electrified intending machine. It is the Arab world that intends to ensure continued deprivation for the Palestinians. Notice how they refuse to absorb the Palestinians into adjacent lands and end the bloodshed? Happy people don't jihad or kill the dreaded Jews anywhere near as much as a bunch of wretched psycho losers. One look is all it takes to know that Islam detests prosperity. |
Posted by: Zenster 2007-10-11 13:49 |
#3 Actually, it's none of the above, for the simple reason that UNWRA intends to keep the Paleos wretched and seething. The more miserable the Paleos, the keener the blade held to Israel's throat. |
Posted by: Seafarious 2007-10-11 13:24 |
#2 And fergawdsake, WHY are they repatriating 500 people (with kids-n-babies) to this rubble-filled moonscape? 1. Payback. 2. Object lesson. 3. Only alternative. 4. Nowhere else to go. 5. Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch. For your answer, please select: A. One of the above B. Some of the above C. All of the above |
Posted by: Zenster 2007-10-11 13:21 |
#1 Well...at least they have their health. And don't the neighbors seem happy to see them back? |
Posted by: tu3031 2007-10-11 12:29 |