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Americans frustrated, angry over US evacuation efforts in Lebanon

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  • Americans frustrated, angry over US evacuation efforts in Lebanon

    Americans frustrated, angry over US evacuation efforts in Lebanon
    By VERENA DOBNIK

    Newsday, NY
    July 19 2006

    July 19, 2006, 4:50 PM EDT

    NEW YORK -- Americans trying to flee Lebanon struggled on Wednesday
    to find out what their government was doing to evacuate them, with
    many relying on the news media for information _ only to learn that
    plans were still not in place.

    "We're getting e-mails from the U.S. Embassy saying, 'We're working
    on it,"' Maria Bakalian said by telephone from Beirut, where she was
    trying to get her 19-year-old son out of the country and back to his
    college classes in Pennsylvania. The family used the U.S. Embassy Web
    site to register Sevag Bakalian for an American evacuation list. He's
    heard nothing so far.

    In Manhattan, his uncle was waiting. "I think incompetence explains
    the situation," said Mirhan Bakalian. "The U.S. system is not working _
    it's ill-suited to think on its feet and move fast."

    On Wednesday, a cruise ship carrying more than 1,000 Americans sailed
    out of Beirut's port, but more than 20,000 other Americans were still
    in Lebanon a week after Israeli airstrikes started.

    Some wondered why they were waiting for basic information _ like
    confirmation that their names were even on a list for evacuation
    _ while other nations already had transported thousands of their
    nationals, free of charge.

    The U.S. government at first said that anyone wishing to leave would
    have to sign a note pledging to reimburse the government the price of
    a commercial flight from Beirut to Cyprus _ usually $150-$200. After
    criticism from Congress, the State Department dropped plans to charge.

    Two other young Americans visiting friends in Beirut watched the
    foreigners leaving.

    "They all got out _ the Turkish, the British, the Danish, the French,
    the Spaniards and the Italians," said Paola Rizzuto, 22, who was
    in Beirut with her boyfriend, Rafael Greenblatt, 26, both of New
    Brunswick, N.J.

    U.S. Ambassador Jeffrey D. Feltman told The Associated Press that the
    evacuation's slow start was intended to safeguard Americans. A call
    to the U.S. Embassy in Beirut was answered by a Marine who said he
    could not comment.

    In New York's borough of Queens, Rizzuto's parents waited anxiously
    to hear when they could pick up their daughter at an airport here.

    "I'm getting angrier and angrier. The American government seems to
    have money for everything else except its citizens," said Joseph
    Rizzuto, a high school teacher in Queens who with his wife and son
    waited for Paola.

    He said he had called the State Department 800 number available to
    answer questions about U.S. citizens in Lebanon, and although she had
    registered, "they couldn't find my daughter's name on any evacuation
    list, and had no information on her."

    Rizzuto then called the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, "and it rang and rang,
    and finally the line went dead."

    In a telephone interview from Beirut, Paola Rizzuto told the AP that
    after registering for evacuation with the U.S. Embassy via e-mail,
    "we were supposed to receive an e-mail confirmation that we're on
    the list, that they've received our registration," she said. So far,
    they've heard nothing from American officials.

    The couple was in Lebanon on a month-long visit at the American
    University in Beirut, whose students were among the first to be
    evacuated. Left behind were Greenblatt and Rizzuto, a graduate
    of Rutgers University in New Brunswick who had attended American
    University as a student.

    With water pressure fading and electricity cut for hours at a time,
    Rizzuto and Greenblatt have spent their days as volunteers helping
    Lebanese families displaced by the airstrikes and now living in a
    makeshift camp in a Beirut park.

    The Bakalian family huddled in their apartment in the Zokak El-Blat
    neighborhood overlooking Beirut's port, watching CNN for any new
    instructions from U.S. officials. From the ninth floor, through thick
    smoke from the airstrikes, "we see the ships come in and go out," said
    Maria Bakalian, adding that the Israelis allowed "windows" of time when
    the port area was safe from airstrikes and vessels could be loaded.

    Bakalian, a Beirut-born Canadian citizen, said she had received
    several cell phone text messages from Canadian officials offering
    plans for evacuation, with costs for the trip covered all the way to
    Canada. "The Canadians are keeping their citizens in the loop. The
    Americans are not," said Bakalian.

    She's staying in Beirut, along with her husband, the Rev. Nishan
    Bakalian _ the Armenian Evangelical chaplain of Haigazian University
    there. Until 2000, the Philadelphia native was pastor of the Armenian
    Evangelical Church in Manhattan.

    Their biggest concern now was "getting our son out safely," said
    Maria Bakalian.

    But once that's accomplished, the family faces another reality. "The
    thought crosses my mind that if he goes, I may not see him for God
    knows how long," she said. "But I know that it all has to come to an
    end at some point."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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