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Foreigners flee Israel onslaught with fears and tears

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  • Foreigners flee Israel onslaught with fears and tears

    Foreigners flee Israel onslaught with fears and tears

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 17, 2006 Monday 9:41 AM GMT

    Wiping away tears and hugging loved ones left behind, hundreds
    of foreigners were fleeing Lebanon on Monday, under the thumps of
    missiles as Israel intensified its military onslaught on the country.

    While British and US citizens started to leave by helicopters, France
    chartered a ferry which can carry some 1,200 passengers, and other
    European, Asian and African nationals were being bussed overland to
    neighboring Syria.

    In six days of relentless air, sea and ground attacks, Israel has
    tightened its grip on the country by imposing a maritime blockade
    and gouging deep craters out of Beirut airport's runways, shutting
    down the facility.

    Israel launched the offensive to crush the Lebanese Shiite militant
    group Hezbollah, but the strikes have also targeted infrastructure
    and killed more than 170 people, almost all of them civilians and
    including foreigners.

    Foreigners heading out of Lebanon were fearing for their safety as
    Israeli forces have targeted the roads to Syria, despite assurances
    Monday from the Jewish state that it was liaising with Washington
    and the EU on the evacuation.

    In a silence only broken by whining complaints, foreigners boarded
    busses at meeting points across the capital for a six-hour journey
    to the Syrian capital from where they will fly home.

    For safety reasons, European embassies were coordinating joint convoys
    for their nationals, who are mostly of Lebanese descent and had spent
    the summer holidays to visit family back home.

    "I feel we are cowards. We are leaving our dear Lebanese friends
    behind. But I have not been in a war zone before, and my family wants
    me to go back home," said Belgian Sigrid Hoste, a teacher who had
    been studying Arabic in Lebanon.

    "I am really angry at what Israel is doing. It is a disproportionate
    attack, and nothing justifies war. Beirut was a buzzing place just
    last week, today it is a ghost town. They have no right to do this,"
    she said.

    "And now, we have to break off our stay in Lebanon, pay 50 dollars for
    the bus, something similar for the hotel in Syria, another 300 euros
    for the ticket to Belgium," she complained. "But I will definitely
    come back."

    Fellow Belgian Elke de Backer, a translator at a bank in Brussels
    who also studies Lebanese Arabic, said: "We are very, very sad for
    Lebanon. It was such a great, fun and vibrant place last week."

    "It was such a great summer of mountain outings, beaches and
    concerts. We had tickets for this week to watch (Lebanese diva) Feyrouz
    in the (Roman) temples of Baalbek," in eastern Lebanon, she said.

    "Now, everything is cancelled."

    At the German embassy meeting point in the Hamra central commercial
    neighborhood, a veiled woman holding a baby in her arm sat on her
    luggage on the sidewalk, surrounded by seven other young women and
    children.

    All of them were crying.

    "These are my sisters and their daughters. We are terrified for
    our parents who are staying behind, but we have to leave because
    our children were terrified by the Israeli air raids last night,"
    said Dunia Ramadan, originally from Beirut.

    "I do not know if my parents will be alive," she said, sobbing quietly
    as she boarded the bus.

    Watching them leave, two watchmen sat in front of a building, nodding
    their heads quietly.

    "It is really scary. If great powers are evacuating their citizens,
    Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert may have warned them that he will
    wreck havoc in Lebanon," one of them said.

    Olmert may have a lot of enemies in Lebanon, but Garen Kochkerian
    had one more grudge against him.

    He had been planning to get married in the next few weeks in Beirut
    with his German girlfriend, Kristina Schmidt, whom he was now bidding
    farewell as she was leaving with the German embassy convoy.

    "It is a catastrophe for Lebanon, and for us. Now everything is
    changed. She has to leave," said Kochkerian, a Lebanese Russian of
    Armenian origin, holding her hand tightly.

    Behind the tinted windows of a large bus, a teary-eyed little girl
    posted a small note on which she scribbled the tradional Arabic
    farewell greeting: "Allah Makon," or God be with you.
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