Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted September 28, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted September 28, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Lebanon: Fleeing families sleep on streets after ******** strikes shake Beirut – National Smoke was still rising from Beirut’s southern suburbs Saturday morning, visible to many of the families who had fled their homes there the night before to escape *******’s massive bombardment. It had been a harrowing night — getting out amid earthshaking explosions, looking in vain for space in one of the overflowing schools-turned-shelters. By the morning, hundreds of families were sleeping in public squares, on beaches or in cars around Beirut. People check a damaged building at the site of an ******** airstrike in Choueifat, south east of Beirut, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2024. AP Photo/Hussein Malla Lines of people trudged up to the mountains above the Lebanese capital, holding infants and a few belongings. Story continues below advertisement Overnight, ******* unleashed a series of strikes on various parts of Dahiyeh, the predominantly Shiite collection of suburbs on Beirut’s southern edge where tens of thousands of residents live. The biggest blasts to hit Beirut in nearly a year of conflict ******* the leader of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah Friday. The ******** was part of a rapid escalation of ******** strikes the past week that has ******* more than 700 people in Lebanon. ******* has vowed to cripple Hezbollah and put an end to 11 months of its ***** onto ******** territory in what Nasrallah described as a “support front” for his ally ****** in Gaza. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up /applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png"> 3:51 Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah ******* in ******** airstrike Previous Video Next Video The newly displaced swell the numbers Beirut is absorbing The people escaping Friday night’s mayhem joined tens of thousands who have fled to Beirut and other areas of southern Lebanon the past week to escape *******’s bombardment. Story continues below advertisement For many residents of Dahiyeh, the forced evacuation was disconcertingly familiar. data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Some were Lebanese who had lived through the bruising monthlong war between ******* and Hezbollah in 2006, when ******* levelled large parts of the Beirut suburbs. Others were Syrians who had taken refuge from the long civil war in their own country. Fatima Chahine, a Syrian ********, slept on the Ramlet al-Bayda public beach in Beirut with her family and hundreds of strangers. The night before she, her husband and their two children had piled onto a motorcycle and raced out of Dahiyeh, with “******** below us and strikes above us.” “Thank ****, no one was wounded,” she said. People who fled the southern suburb of Beirut amid ongoing ******** airstrikes, sit at a park in down town Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2024. AP Photo/Hussein Malla The government has opened up schools in Beirut to take in the displaced. But Syrians have reported that some sites turn them away to reserve the few spaces for Lebanese. Chahine said her family came directly to the beach. Story continues below advertisement “We only want a place where our children won’t be afraid,” she said. “We fled from the war in Syria in 2011 because of the children and we came here, and now the same thing is happening again.” Since Monday, some 22,331 Syrians in Lebanon have crossed back into Syria, along with 22,117 Lebanese, according to Lebanese authorities. Chahine said returning is not an option for her family; she is from an opposition area and so could face reprisals from the Syrian government. More on World More videos At the beach, the displaced were spread out over the sidewalk or in cars parked by the curb. Others were camped out in beach pagodas or on blankets in the sand. “We spent more than three hours going in circles between schools and shelters and we didn’t find one with room,” said Talal Ahmad Jassaf, a Lebanese man who slept on the beach with his family. He said he is considering going to the relative safety of Syria. But he worries about airstrikes on the road between Beirut and Damascus. Trending Now data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== Trump, meeting with Zelenskyy, says he has ‘good relationship’ with ****** data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== Hurricane Helene photos show Florida reeling from ‘catastrophic’ surge Some people are left without aid The U.N. Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, said this week’s escalation had more than doubled the number of people displaced by the conflict in Lebanon. There are now over 211,000 people displaced, including some of the humanitarian workers who should be responding to the crisis, it said. Around 85,000 of them are sleeping in shelters, it said. Story continues below advertisement “Humanitarian capacities to respond have been severely overstretched,” it added. Displaced people sleeping outside in Beirut largely told The Associated Press that they had not received assistance from any humanitarian organization. Families sit on the ground in Martyrs’ square after fleeing the ******** airstrikes in Beirut’s southern suburbs, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2024. AP Photo/Bilal Hussein A stadium in the seaside neighbourhood of Manara owned by the Nejmeh soccer club opened its doors to the displaced, who spent the night sleeping on bleachers. Among them was Mariam Darwish, her husband and five children. She fled her home in Dahiyeh earlier in the week when the first ******** strikes hit there. Darwish said they had received water from the soccer club but that no organization had brought food, blankets or other supplies. “People are helping each other out, family and friends are getting things for each other,” she said. Story continues below advertisement She and her husband had fled during the 2006 war, when their oldest son was a baby, and returned to their home when the war ended. They hope their house will still be standing to return to this time, she said. “We’re worried about our children and the schools, that they’ll lose out on their future,” she said. “What can we do? We can only say thank ****.” She added, “May the resistance be victorious.” At the time of the interview, Hezbollah had not yet confirmed Nasrallah’s ******. Despite their battered-down circumstances, others also struck a defiant tone. Jamal Hussein fled Dahiyeh at 3 a.m. with his extended family amid ongoing ******** and spent the night sleeping on the seaside promenade in Beirut’s upscale Ain Mreisseh district. “Of course we aren’t afraid for ourselves, but we have children,” he said. “We are steadfast and ready to sacrifice more than this.” This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up /applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png"> 2:49 Defiant Netanyahu vows to continue attacks on Lebanon, Gaza Previous Video Next Video © 2024 The ********* Press This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Lebanon #Fleeing #families #sleep #streets #******** #strikes #shake #Beirut #National This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/137532-lebanon-fleeing-families-sleep-on-streets-after-israeli-strikes-shake-beirut-%E2%80%93-national/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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