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Bekijk Volledige Versie : Israel bleef ijskoud doorgaan met bombarderen zelfs na 2006-Qana-Slachting



Coolassprov MC
31-07-06, 18:52
Blanford reveals that Israeli warplanes actually continued to bomb the town while the rescue workers were pulling ragdoll-dead children out of the building. That's cold, man. Cold:


' An earth-mover ground down the lane and began clawing chunks of concrete away from the building. Even as the rescue team toiled to recover the dead, Israeli jets continued to roar overhead and the thump of air strikes and exploding artillery shells reverberated around the steep valley. '

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=74202


Southern villagers run gauntlet in search of refuge

By Nicholas Blanford
Special to The Daily Star
Monday, July 24, 2006


SIDDIQINE: With an expression of utmost calm on her blood-masked face, the woman allowed herself to be gently lowered from the roof of the mini-bus into the waiting arms of two Lebanese Red Cross volunteers. The rescue workers had extracted her through a jagged hole in the roof of the crumpled mini-bus, the result of a missile fired minutes earlier by an Israeli helicopter which had blasted the vehicle off the road. Left behind in the vehicle, slumped over each other and soaked in blood, were the bodies of three people.

The narrow roads that meander through the valleys and undulating chalky hills east of Tyre were a place of terror and death Sunday, with Israeli helicopters attacking civilian vehicles fleeing Israel's onslaught against South Lebanon.

"Today is the day of the cars," says Dr. Ahmad Mrowe, director of the Jabal Amal hospital in Tyre. "It's been very bad."

By early evening, the Jabal Amel Hospital alone had received 41 wounded, most of them serious, according to hospital sources, all of the casualties thought to be civilians seeking refuge north of the Litani River after heeding Israeli warnings to leave the area before the onslaught intensifies.

The level of destruction and the dangers of traveling along these bomb-cratered roads were made clear within moments of leaving the perimeter of Tyre, which has become a relative safe haven compared to the town's hinterland.

In the Horsh district outside Tyre, an aerial bomb had gouged a deep crater in the middle of the wide road, blocking passage. A short detour down a lane and through an orange orchard led back to the main road. But there were more craters, perhaps one every kilometer, most of which were passable by inching around the rim of the hole.

The streets of Hannawiyyeh and Qana were littered with broken glass, severed electricity cables, lumps of earth, ripped sheet metal from store fronts, stones and pieces of concrete, the result of Israeli shellfire into these sprawling dusty villages. Many houses showed signs of shell damage - broken windows, shell-pocked roofs and smashed walls. The signs of hasty flight by panicked residents could be found in the crashed and abandoned cars on the side of the road. One had run full speed into a corner of a house, the front of the vehicle squashed to half its size. Another had struck an electricity pylon. Israeli jets rumbled overhead amid the almost constant hollow thump of artillery fire.

In Siddiqine, the bombed main road meant another diversion through cramped backstreets carpeted with broken glass, dirt and yet more fallen electricity cables. The village was under shellfire, thick dirty white plumes of smoke and dust blooming briefly among houses

300 meters away. Each exploding round was preceded by the ominous ripping sound of an artillery shell passing overhead.

Every now and then, a car flashed past, usually crammed with people, the driver hunched over the steering wheel, his eyes fixed on the road ahead. Some passengers held out of the window sticks with fluttering white sheets attached for the benefit of the Israelis lurking in the deep blue sky above.
http://www.dailystar.com.lb