by Miki » Sat 29 Jul 2006, 04:14:17
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think what more they want to know is a more personal look at things. If your in Lebanon, I'm genuinely curious, what parts can you personally confirm as hit? I ask because my brother only just got back from there, and we have pictures of him standing next to things that I just saw on CNN as completely destroyed. Kinda depressing, the buildings in the pictures where really beautiful.
Let's see. As for confirmed as hit,
-Several neighborhoods in South Beirut which are only debries and dead bodies now. Several people have said that the smell of dead bodies in Dahie is unbearable.
-The satellite installation in Fatha, 20 min from my house. The bomb used was so potent, that my windows almost broke. The noise was so loud that we thought they were bombarding our neighborhood. As a consequence, our mobile phones did not work for over a week. A whole Christian area did not have mobile communication for that week. Also, several TV channels had disruptions in their transmissions.
-The over 20 soldiers from the Lebanese army that have been cowardly hit while they were sitting at their posts and fixing damaged electricity connections.
-The port of Jounieh (Christian area, located in the Middle Coast of Lebanon). We heard the explosions here.
-The port of Tripoli in the North of Lebanon.
-The airport which had been completely renovated in the last 5 years has been hit several times, destroying all the main runways.
-Several power stations and gas stations, and oil reserves.
-Over 60 bridges so far; in a small country like this, that's a lot!
-So many roads, all the roads connected to Syria have been bombarded several times, rendering the only route of escape dangerous. In other words, any Lebanese that wants to escape needs to risk his/her life because the only way out is the road to Syria, which is bombarded every now and then with no previous notice.
-The city of Amchit, in the North of Lebanon.
-The truck bombed in Asrafieh with was transporting food. Ashrafieh is a very frequented Christian area in Beirut. To bombard a truck while people were unprepared and thought that Israel could only hit Muslim Shiah areas was a very cheap thing from the Israeli state, if I may add.
-We've seen several reports from the Minister of Health about the presence of phosphorus on dead and injured persons.
-The cities in the South, well, suffice it to say there's not much of them left.
-Every day we see the corpses on TV. TV here shows *everything*, uncensored and very graphic. We see many burnt children, people with extremely painful injuries, dead people inside bags whose bodies don't look like a human being, people in pieces,....
-About 3 ambulances have been hit so far, one church, at least two mosques, the UN post (all these I have seen images of on TV, so I can confirm they happened).
-I can also confirm that most schools in Norther Beirut, Jounieh and other Christian areas are packed full with people who have lost their home and are living crammed in classrooms and getting their food from donations.
-I can confirm that the death count is imprecise because many bodies are still buried under debris and can't be taken out because Israel is still bombing.
-I can confirm that several people have been hit as they were trying to escape, including a van transporting refugees, a refugee shelter where people were temporarily staying, a bridge people were using to escape, several cars with families trying to escape...
-I can confirm the people that are still in the South, which numbers as high as 35 000 can't escape easily because the roads are broken and they can't drive, so they need to walk horrendous distances under the sun.
-I can confirm that Israel has started bombarding Sidon, the city further North where many refugees from the cities of the South were staying.
-I can tell you that no one here wants to drive a truck anymore because we've all realized that Israel hits any truck because they seem to think a truck is always "suspicious".
Oh, and most importantly, I can *assure* you that there are no Hisballah people in Christian areas. Yet, many Christian areas have been hit. I can also assure you that the neighborhoods of Dahie and the other parts of South Beirut that were bombarded were civilian neoghborhoods, full of innocent civilian families. While many people there might have supported Hisballah politically (Hisballah is a political party and a resistance guerrilla), that does not mean that they were Hisballah militants. While there were a few Hisballah offices in the area, 99% of the area was populated by families, not by Hisballah offices, headquarters, or anything of that sort. Most combatants in Hisballah are locate in the South of Lebanon. The only reason why the Israelis cowardly bombarded Dahie and South Beirut, is because they know that the Shiah Muslims are the main political supporters of Hisballah in this country. By *anihilating* a great proportion of those civilians, they probably think Hisballah's support in Lebanon will diminish as they're slaughtering all their supporters. Also, they probably think Shiah people will hate Hisballah after this, but nothing is more far from the truth. I've seen on TV how those people are hating Israel more than ever, and viewing Hisballah, more than ever, as their only hope. The only party defending them while the Lebanese government--once again--does nothing to protect them. And history repeats itself...That's the reason why Hisballah was created in 1982 during the Israeli invasion, and that how they got all their followers from the Shiah Muslims in this country, which happened to be also the poorest and most oppressed groups here.
Honestly, there's much more destruction and killing that I can tell you about, but just thinking about it is giving me a tension headache.
I can't go out and take photos because I'd be risking my life, but I'll look for photos of the "before" and "after" of several areas that were hit on the web. It is quite easy to watch such scenes in Lebanese tv channels, such as LBC (the Lebanese Broadcasting Television), which transmits to all the world. You can try to check that.
Out of curiosity, and to address some of the concerns and questions of many people in this forum. What did your brother shared about his visit? Or was he working here? In particular,
-Did he feel hated or unwelcome for being an American?
-Did he feel this was a "backward" country?
-From his experiences here, does he view Israeli actions as terrorist?
I hope I'm not being too nosy, but I think it would be interesting to have his perspective on the issue, especially if he had been living here for a while, rather than just coming for tourism.