Four dead as renewed clashes hit Lebanon Palestinian camp

Three fighters and a civilian were killed Saturday in clashes at a south Lebanon Palestinian camp, official media reported, as Prime Minister Najib Mikati rebuked Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas over the spiralling violence.

Renewed fighting broke out late Thursday in Ain al-Helweh refugee camp on the
outskirts of the coastal city of Sidon, just weeks after deadly violence
pitted members of Abbas’s Fatah movement against Islamist militants.

Ongoing clashes inside the camp on Saturday killed “two people from Fatah”
and an Islamist, while “a civilian was killed by a stray bullet” outside the
camp, Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA) said, reporting dozens of
others wounded.

“What is taking place does not serve the Palestinian cause at all and is a
serious offence to the Lebanese state” and the city of Sidon, Mikati told
Abbas in a phone call on Saturday, his office said in a statement.

Mikati emphasised “the priority of ending military operations and cooperating
with Lebanese security forces to address tensions”, according to the
statement on X, formerly Twitter.

Heavy clashes broke out on Saturday morning after calm had largely prevailed
overnight, an AFP correspondent in Sidon said, reporting the sound of
automatic and heavy weapons.

The fighting was focused on a school compound belonging to the United
Nations’ agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, a source in the camp’s
Palestinian leadership told AFP on condition of anonymity.

UNRWA had previously warned that militants were occupying its schools in the
camp.

Ain al-Helweh is home to more than 54,000 registered refugees and thousands
of Palestinians who joined them in recent years from Syria, fleeing war in
the neighbouring country.

The camp, Lebanon’s largest, was created for Palestinians who were driven out
or fled during the 1948 war at the time of Israel’s creation.

– ‘Going through hell’ –

The Lebanese army, which by long-standing convention does not enter the camps
and leaves Palestinian factions to handle security there, called on “all
relevant parties in the camp to stop the fighting”.

It said it was taking the “necessary measures and making the required
contacts to stop the clashes, which endanger the lives of innocent” people.

Dozens of families fled as the fighting intensified, carrying bags packed
with basic necessities such as bread, water and medicine, the AFP
correspondent said.

Camp resident Mohammed Badran, 32, said he would “sleep on the streets” with
his wife and two terrified children rather than return before the fighting
ended.

“We were going through hell,” he said from a Sidon mosque where his and other
families have taken refuge.

An AFP correspondent saw aid workers setting up tents outside the municipal
stadium in Sidon to shelter camp dwellers displaced by the fighting.

“The municipality is coordinating with the Red Cross to set up 16 tents as a
first step,” Mustafa Hijazi, an official in charge of disaster management at
Sidon municipality, told AFP.

“We expect to erect more (tents), to accommodate about 250 people,” he added.

A public hospital directly adjacent to the camp transferred all its patients
to other facilities because of the danger, its director Ahmad al-Samadi told
AFP.

Five days of clashes that began in late July left 13 people dead and dozens
wounded, in the worst outbreak of violence in the camp in years.

That fighting erupted after the death of an Islamist militant, followed by an
ambush that killed five Fatah members including a military leader.

The United Nations’ resident coordinator in Lebanon, Imran Riza, on Friday
urged “armed groups to stop the fighting in the camp” and to “immediately”
vacate schools belonging to the UNRWA.

“The use by armed groups of schools amounts to gross violations” of
international law, Riza said in a statement.

Lebanon hosts an estimated 250,000 Palestinian refugees, according to the UN
agency.

Most live in Lebanon’s 12 official camps, and face a variety of legal
restrictions including on employment.

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