Clashes intensify at Lebanon camp
Lebanese army troops battle Fatah al-Islam, despite calls for a truce.

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“From outside it’s very easy to condemn the Lebanese army and government for what they are doing against Fatah-al-Islam” Rabih, Mansourieh El Metn, Lebanon |
Witnesses said Fatah al-Islam fighters fired back on army positions.
Georges Kettaneh, head of rescue operations for the Lebanese Red Cross, told reporters that 17 Palestinians were evacuated from the camp on Monday afternoon.
“The Red Cross established, in co-ordination with the Lebanese army and the Palestinian Red Crescent, a safe evacuation corridor which helped us evacuate 17 cases from Nahr al-Bared,” he said.
He said that some food and water supplies were taken in.
Abu Hisham Laila, an official of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine [PFLP], speaking to Al Jazeera from inside the camp, called the Lebanese bombing of the camp “indiscriminate”.
“All residents have stayed at home, taking shelter in lower floors,” he said.
“We want ambulances to be allowed into the camp to transfer the civilian casualties. We also want fire brigades to enter the camp and put off the fire in many buildings.”
The continued fighting has led to fears that violence could flare in other Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon.
Fighting broke out between the army and Fatah al-Islam on Sunday morning after security forces raided homes in Tripoli to arrest suspects of a bank robbery.
At least three members of Fatah al-Islam, which has been accused of having links to al-Qaeda and Syrian intelligence, were killed after the army stormed the building they were hiding in.
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A judicial source said on Monday that one of the fighters killed in Sunday’s fighting was wanted by Lebanon for involvement in a plot to bomb two trains in Germany last year.
Saddam al-Hajj Deeb, a Lebanese citizen, was one of five men charged with attempted mass murder.
Deeb was on the run and being tried in absentia.