Fighting resumes at Palestinian camp in Lebanon

Heavy fighting shattered a brief lull as the Lebanese army continued bombarding suspected hideouts of militants holed up in a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon.

Fighting resumes at Palestinian camp in Lebanon

Heavy fighting shattered a brief lull as the Lebanese army continued bombarding suspected hideouts of militants holed up in a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon.

The new round of clashes yesterday came a day after some of the heaviest fighting since June 1, when the Lebanese army – using tanks and artillery - launched a fresh offensive to drive out the Fatah Islam militants.

A senior military official said the number of soldiers killed in Saturday’s fighting had risen to 11. The official said 40 others were wounded, some seriously.

It was the highest casualty toll in a single day since fighting began on May 20 - the worst internal violence to engulf Lebanon since the 1975-90 civil war - reflecting the tough challenge Lebanese troops face in efforts to crush Fatah Islam militants barricaded inside the camp.

Another soldier, wounded earlier at the camp, had died of his wounds on Saturday, bringing to 58 the total number of soldiers killed in the fighting.

Thick black and white smoke billowed from the Nahr el-Bared camp on the outskirts of the northern city of Tripoli by late afternoon yesterday, as troops unleashed artillery fire on suspected Fatah Islam hideouts, security officials and witnesses said.

During the relative lull yesterday, the Lebanese Red Cross along with the Palestinian Red Crescent Society evacuated some 75 civilians, mainly women, children and elderly, from Nahr el-Bared, taking them to the nearby Beddawi refugee camp, a Lebanese Red Cross official told The Associated Press.

The aid workers also pulled out two bodies from under the rubble, the official said.

It was not clear if the bodies belonged to Palestinian civilians from the camp or Fatah Islam militants. Although most of Nahr el-Bared’s residents have fled, thousands of civilians remain inside.

The state-run National News Agency said the army was making advances and that its bombardment was targeting Fatah Islam’s main stronghold in the camp and the location of the group’s leaders, in efforts to uproot the militants.

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