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Fearful escape from Beirut

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  • Fearful escape from Beirut

    Fearful escape from Beirut
    By Lin Noueihed and Adam Bell

    Sunday Telegraph/Australia

    July 16, 2006 12:00

    THE first Australians to flee war torn Lebanon arrived home to tearful
    reunions with family in Sydney last night.

    "It was very bad," Joseph Hadchiti cried.

    "They burned all the bridges, the airport. I was very worried."

    Mr Hadchiti fled Beirut with his wife and seven-year-old daughter
    on Thursday.

    The Sydney father told of his 36-hour dash to flee the region. His
    family got a lift to the Syrian border, then a cab to Damascus,
    where they boarded a commercial flight which flew via Bahrain.

    But his excitement last night to be home was tinged with sadness. Mr
    Hadchiti had to make the heart-wrenching decision to leave his other
    daughter, Xena, behind with her young family.

    His other daughters and son in Sydney spent an anxious two days
    awaiting news that their family were safe. They could communicate
    only via SMS text messages because all the telephone lines were jammed.

    "It's 4.20am and we haven't slept yet because of the sound of the
    Israeli airplanes and bombings. God bless xo," read one text.

    Also touching down on Australian soil last night was Rosie Haddad
    and her children Stephanie, Ellie and Anthony.

    "We just ran as soon as we found out. It was very stressful,"
    Mrs Haddad said. Asked how it felt to be back home, Anthony said:
    "It's the best."

    They were the lucky ones. For most people, every avenue for safe
    rescue remains blocked as the intense Israeli bombing campaign has
    shut down all Lebanon's main transport routes.

    There are an estimated 3000 Australians travelling in Lebanon and
    another 25,000 members of the Australian Lebanese community who
    live there.

    They include 78 members of the Sydney Armenian Community dance group,
    including young children, teens and young adults, who are trapped in
    Beirut as Israel's bombing raids continue.

    "There is a lot of anger, and a lot of frustration," said Rosemary
    Diodati, 12 members of whose extended family are stranded.

    "I don't think they (governments) are doing enough. We want them out,
    and we want them safe and sound," he said.

    Sydney man Aren Eablanian, 23, a member of the dance group stuck in
    Beirut, said they were becoming increasingly anxious listening to
    the bombs exploding.

    "We're seeing what's happening on television, and it's pretty scary --
    especially what's going on with the airport," he said.

    Younger members were panicking, Mr Eablanian said. "It's getting
    really stressful for everyone.

    "We just want to go home, but we have no idea when that will be."

    At least 79 civilians have been killed and 248 wounded since Israel
    began its assault on Lebanon after the capture of two soldiers and
    the killing of eight others by the Shiite militant group Hezbollah
    on Wednesday.

    Eighteen civilians, including nine children, were burnt alive in
    an Israeli helicopter gunship attack yesterday on residents fleeing
    border villages in south Lebanon, UN and hospital sources said.

    The bomb raids have destroyed runways at Beirut's airport and major
    roads out of the country.

    Israeli army chief Dan Halutz said more targets would be bombed in a
    bid to remove Hezbollah from the border and replace it with a force
    answerable to the Lebanese government.

    In retaliation, Hezbollah fired more than two dozen rockets at towns
    in northern Israel, slightly wounding several people.

    Hezbollah leader Sheik Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, speaking shortly
    after Israeli jets destroyed his Beirut home, said the guerrilla group
    had hit an Israeli warship off Beirut and threatened to launch deep
    strikes inside the Jewish state.

    "You wanted open war. We are going to open war," Sheik Nasrallah
    declared.

    Israel's assault on Lebanon has drawn mounting world criticism,
    but the White House said President Bush would not press Israel to
    halt operations.
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