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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syrian media denies relations with Hamas, claims Muslim Brotherhood links
2019-06-09
[AlMasdar] A media source told the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) on Friday that Syria has not restored relations with Hamas, the well-beloved offspring of the Moslem Brotherhood,, despite the claims by the Paleostinian group’s leader, Ismail Haniyah, earlier this month.

"The stance of Syria on this issue is principled," the SANA source said, adding "this stance, in the past, was built on the fact that Hamas was a resistance movement against ’Israel’, but, later it became clear that it is the blood of Moslem Brüderbund that dominates this movement when it supported the bully boyz in Syria and engaged in the scheme that ’Israel’ wanted."

The SANA source said that all the news circulated will never change Syria’s attitude towards those who have been rejected by the Syrian people since the beginning of the war.

Haniyah told Sputnik News in an exclusive interview that Hamas had accepted Syria’s view on the opposition groups.

Hamas, who is allied with Iran, cut off relations with Syria in 2012 after their then leader, Khaled Mesha’al, abruptly left Damascus for Qatar
...an emirate on the east coast of the Arabian Peninsula. It sits on some really productive gas and oil deposits, which produces the highest per capita income in the world. They piss it all away on religion, financing the Moslem Brotherhood and several al-Qaeda affiliates. Home of nutbag holy manYusuf al-Qaradawi...
Upon his arrival in Qatar, Mesha’al heavily criticized Damascus and adopted Doha’s narrative on the Syrian conflict.

Since then, Syria and Hamas have had strained relations, with the former shifting their primary support for the Paleostinian people to groups like the PFLP, PFLP-GC, PIJ, DFLP, and Fatah al-Intifada.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syrian Army’s Tiger Forces head to southern Damascus for showdown with ISIS
2018-04-13
[ALMASDARNEWS] The Syrian Arab Army’s elite Tiger Forces have received orders to redeploy from the East Ghouta region to southern Damascus, a military source told al-Masdar News this afternoon.

Following their victory in the East Ghouta, the Syrian Arab Army’s High Command made the decision to send the Tiger Forces to the Yarmouk Camp and al-Qadam districts in order to halt the Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
’s (ISIS) advance in the area.

ISIS was recently able to seize more than 90 percent of the al-Qadam District after a swift offensive against the Syrian Arab Army late last month.

The Tiger Forces will be leading this offensive alongside their allies from the Elite Republican Guard and several Paleostinian paramilitary groups.

Among the Paleostinian paramilitary groups participating in this offensive will be the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine-General Command (PFLP-GC), Liwaa al-Quds
...the Jerusalem Brigade is a Paleostinian-Syrian pro-Government group that operates in Aleppo, formed in 2013. The group is composed of predominately Sunni Paleostinians from the al-Nayrab district as well as the former refugee camp Handarat. It is believed to be the largest Assadist auxilliary force operating in storied Aleppo...
, Qawat al-Jaleel, and Fatah al-Intifada.

The Syrian Army and their Paleostinian allies have finished their preparations and should be launching this offensive in the coming hours.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Analysis: The Myth Of Palestinian Neutrality In Syria
2012-07-28
[Ma'an] On July 14, thousands of Paleostinian refugees marched in a funeral procession for 11 unarmed protesters rubbed out by Syrian security forces in the al-Yarmouk refugee camp. Raucous and seething with rage, mourners chanted for Syria and Paleostine, called for the downfall of Bashir al-Assad's regime, and sang for freedom.

Whether this burgeoning civil disobedience movement will grow into an open, durable rebellion remains to be seen, but the significance and the potential influence of the latest wave of protests that has swept Syria's largest Paleostinian camp cannot be overlooked.

As the Syrian uprising gathered momentum and the Syrian regime escalated its repression against what started out as a peaceful revolt, concerns have emerged about the impact of the uprising on Paleostinian refugees in Syria, who make up just over 2 percent of Syria's total population.

The Paleostinian political elite in Syria have been divided. Some factions have desperately attempted to appear neutral, distancing themselves from the unrest. Others, such as Ahmad Jibril's PFLP-GC, Fatah al-Intifada, and the Paleostinian-Baathist militia al-Sa'iqa, have actively supported the regime, bolstering its propaganda campaigns and crushing civil dissent inside the camps.

In stark contrast to the moribund, aging politicianship, Paleostinian-Syrian youth activists, who prior to the eruption of the uprising had focused their activism on Paleostine, have participated in the uprising since the very beginning as demonstrators; organizers of aid and relief work for maimed and internally-displaced Syrians; or as citizen journalists, photographers and media activists. The hub of their activism, however, remained outside the camps for most of the uprising.

Never were the tensions among Syria's Paleostinians as discernible as during the aftermath of last year's Naksa Day protests on June 5, when dozens of unarmed Paleostinians were killed by the Israeli occupation army in the occupied Golan Heights border area. Yarmouk inhabitants and deaders' families set the PFLP-GC building ablaze in a strong denunciation of the faction's role in mobilizing to instigate the youths to march back home without any protection despite the anticipated deadly reaction by the Israeli army.

The faction engaged in a pathetically naked attempt to deflect attention from the regime's crackdown. Several Paleostinians were killed in the festivities that ensued between Yarmouk residents and armed PFLP-GC gunnies following the funeral. However,
a person who gets all wrapped up in himself makes a mighty small package...
with the exception of the Syrian navy's attack on the al-Raml refugee camp last summer and the occasional Syrian army shelling on refugee camps in Daraa, Hama and Homs, the situation in the refugee camps remained cautiously quiet.

Intifada in the camps

Since February, the al-Yarmouk camp has regularly held protests in solidarity with the besieged Syrian cities and towns. It participated in the Damascus
...The place where Pencilneck hangs his brass hat...
general strike on May 29, 2012. The protests would normally pass quietly without being attacked by Syrian security forces.

The straw that broke the camel's back was the abduction and then killing of 13 Paleostinian Liberation Army fighters from the Nayrab refugee camp in Aleppo
...For centuries, Aleppo was Greater Syria's largest city and the Ottoman Empire's third, after Constantinople and Cairo. Although relatively close to Damascus in distance, Aleppans regard Damascenes as country cousins...
. Though the identity of the killers is unknown, the killings sparked a large protest in Yarmouk on July 12, and an even larger protest the next day. Buoyant chants of "God bless the Free Syrian Army", "From Syria to Paleostine, one people not two", and "Long live Syria and down with Assad" echoed in the camp's streets. The Syrian army shot up protesters and for the first time, festivities between the regime army and the FSA broke out inside the camp, marking a significant tipping point. The Local Coordination Committee of Yarmouk camp called for mass protests and a general strike to protest the killings.

Jihad Makdissi, the front man of the Syrian Foreign Ministry, described Paleostinians in Syria as "guests" and cynically told them to "leave Syria for one of the Arab democracies" if they misbehave. Makdissi's Facebook statement, which he later deleted, fired up the rubes and highlighted the complicated nature of Paleostinian participation in the uprising.

"We always warned against pushing the camp into the uprising, but no one listened," tweeted an anti-Assad Yarmouk resident following the massacre. The International Committee of the Red Thingy recently described the situation in Syria as a civil war. Thus, concerns of being "stuck" in the middle of a civil war or intervening in "internal" affairs are perfectly legitimate and understandable. Active opposition to the Syrian regime poses serious risks to Paleostinian refugees.

The most imminent scenario is that the general violence that has marred the country for the last 16 months would spill over to the camps. Despite their under-privileged status as stateless refugees, Paleostinians in refugee camps have been relatively safer than neighboring Syrian districts in besieged cities, leading several internally displaced families to seek asylum in the Paleostinian camps. Meanwhile,
...back at the Esquimeau village our hero was receiving a quick lesson in aeronautics......
the regime has mostly avoided launching direct attacks on refugee camps, particularly Yarmouk, in order not to alienate an already divided population.

However,
a person who gets all wrapped up in himself makes a mighty small package...
as shown by the attack on unarmed protesters in Yarmouk, the Syrian regime has not backed down on attacking Paleostinian refugees, dare they "misbehave."

The situation could further deteriorate in the event of festivities between the regime army and armed opposition fighters. Yarmouk camp is a strategically important area that borders Midan, Tadamun, and al-Hajar al-Aswad -- Damascene neighborhoods that have seen intense festivities between the army and the FSA in the last few days. This raises the possibility that the camp could turn into a niche area of battle. A less likely -- but perhaps more dangerous -- scenario is an intra-Paleostinian collision between regime loyalists and opponents. The festivities that followed the Naksa Day protests last year served to expose the tensions enveloping the Paleostinian community in Syria; the current unrest could foment them.

The searing memories of the destruction of Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in north Leb are still haunting and vivid five years on; the fears of a similar scenario taking place in Syria are not completely far-fetched despite the glaring differences between the two situations.

The myth of neutrality

In spite of the aforementioned perils, the participation of Paleostinian-Syrian youth in the uprising seems inevitable and unavoidable. Contrary to Paleostinian refugees in neighboring Leb who are dehumanized and denied basic rights, Paleostinians in Syria have long enjoyed rights equal to those of Syrian citizens in most respects, including health, education and employment. Equality is not a favor that the Assad family bestowed upon Paleostinians: Law 60, which grants Paleostinian refugees near equality with Syrian nationals, was passed in 1956 by a democratically elected parliament under the leadership of the widely admired former president, Shoukri al-Quwatli. Though strongly bound to the Paleostinian cause, many Paleostinians in Syria, particularly second- and third-generation refugees, have assimilated into Syrian society.

So, how all of a sudden, have Paleostinians become "outsiders" who should refrain from intervening in "internal" Syrian affairs?

The irony is especially striking since the Syrian regime has long crowned itself as the guardian of the Paleostinian cause and Pan-Arabism. Moreover, it has -- since the uprising -- used the Paleostinian cause to whitewash its crimes and defend the indefensible. Another question that begs to be asked is: What are 'internal' Syrian affairs, and what constitutes an intrusion in those affairs? Should Paleostinians cease providing shelter and aid for maimed and displaced Syrians in the name of respecting "internal" affairs? Should they abstain from protesting against Assad's military tyranny in the name of respecting Syria's illusory sovereignty? Not only are the boundaries extremely vague, neutrality in the Syrian crisis is a myth.

Additionally, it is impossible to expect Paleostinians who were born, raised, educated in Syria -- who have lived their entire lives there -- to sit on the fence. It is also a false dichotomy to think that a sense of belonging to Syria negates the Paleostinian identity and roots of refugees, who have a sacred, inalienable right of return to Paleostine. Moreover, to claim that they are "used by both sides" is a profound insult to the Paleostinians who freely chose to protest against the Syrian regime. Such a claim suggests that anti-regime Paleostinians have no free will or autonomy. The Paleostinian population in Syria is diverse and no one, including prominent Paleostinian intellectuals and activists outside Syria, has the right to speak in their name and decide for them.

When one considers all the complexities and uncertainty plaguing the situation in Syria, staying on the sidelines no longer appears to be a feasible option.

It is both painfully ironic and incredibly moving that Yarmouk, built to host ethnically cleansed Paleostinians, has now turned into a safe haven for Syrians fleeing the shelling on Tadamon and Midan; that UNRWA schools became shelters in the last few days; and that Paleostinian residents of the camp have donated mattresses, meals and medicine for their maimed Syrian neighbors. These acts of solidarity have been beacons of inspiration amid the endless cycle of violence and grief that has descended upon Syria.
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Africa North
Palestinian factions walk out of Cairo meeting
2011-12-22
(Ma'an) -- Eight Paleostinian political factions have walked out of a reconciliation meeting meant to represent all parties after being told they could not participate because they were not part of the PLO.

Sources who wished to remain anonymous told Ma'an that the Popular Resistance Movement, the Popular Resistance Committees, the Al-Ahrar Movement, Fatah al-Intifada, As-Saiqa and the Popular Struggle Front, were among the parties forbidden from taking part in talks.

Head of the Fatah delegation Azzam al-Ahmad had informed the groups that they could not participate.

"The insistence by Fatah to exclude eight Paleostinian factions from reconciliation dialogue, thus denying them their historic role as representatives of the Paleostinian people, casts doubt upon Fatah's attitude to reconciliation," a statement from the Popular Resistance Movement said.
Once the People's Front of Judea were splitters, full of vim and vinegar. Now nobody so much as curses as they pass, not even their mothers.
"Such an attitude only maintains a state of disagreement," the statement added.

Fatah and Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, leaders had met on Sunday and other political parties were to join the Egypt-brokered talks on Tuesday.

The reconciliation accord aims to unite the parties after Hamas seized control of the Gazoo Strip in 2007, a year after winning national elections.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
PFLP-GC members shoot it out in Leb
2010-04-09
[Al Arabiya Latest] Clashes broke out briefly in eastern Lebanon on Thursday when a dispute between members of a Syrian-backed Palestinian faction escalated into violence, the army said. "Preliminary information indicates that the fight was a result of an internal disagreement," an army spokesman told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

A Palestinian official said automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades were fired during the clashes, which broke out at the Liberation of Palestine - General Command (PFLP-GC) group's Ain al-Bayda base near the town of Kfar Zabad in the Bekaa Valley.

One person was injured in the clashes which quickly died down, the Palestinian official added. PFLP-GC commanders were unreachable. "The situation is calm now," the army spokesman said Thursday afternoon, adding that an officer and three other members of the PFLP-GC had turned themselves in to the army.

The PFLP-GC, led by Ahmad Jibril, was founded with Syrian backing during the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war. Along with Palestinian group Fatah al-Intifada, Jibril's movement has bases in the Bekaa near the Syrian border. The PFLP-GC also has a base in Nehmeh, south of the capital Beirut.

Unlike most Palestinian factions in Lebanon, which are located inside the country's 12 refugee camps and remain loyal to Gaza or the West Bank, Fatah al-Intifada and the PFLP-GC continue to be backed by Damascus.

The two movements' arsenal remains a thorny issue between Lebanon and its powerful neighbor. In January a leader of Fatah al-Intifada said his group would not disarm outside of the camps but was willing to discuss where in Lebanon it holds its arms. The Lebanese government has called for Palestinian groups outside refugee camps to disarm, saying the issue was not up for negotiation.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria: Lebanese militants behind deadly blasts, claims govt
2008-11-08
(AKI) - The Syrian government has claimed that a militant belonging to Fatah al-Islam, an Al-Qaeda inspired group was behind the September bombings that killed 17 people and injured 65 others in the capital, Damascus. Syrian state television on Thursday showed what it claimed to be 12 members of Fatah al-Islam confessing they had planned the attack.

The militants interviewed also claimed that one of Fatah al-Islam's financial sources is the Future Movement or Tayyar al-Mustaqbal, a Lebanese political movement led by Saad Hariri, son of slain Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri.
Most of the people shown on TV were Syrian nationals, Palestinian refugees and a Yemeni national.

One of the militants, Abdel Baqi Hussein, a Syrian national claimed that the suicide bomber was a Saudi Arabian citizen known as Abu Aisha Abu Bandar Jazrawi and that the explosives used in the attack were smuggled from neighbouring Lebanon. "The objective was to rattle the Syrian regime," said Baqi Hussein.
I'm guessing the al-Qaeda boys are even less enthralled with Alawites as they are with Shi'a ...
The militants interviewed also claimed that one of Fatah al-Islam's financial sources is the Future Movement or Tayyar al-Mustaqbal, a Lebanese political movement led by Saad Hariri, son of slain Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri.
Oh what a convenient accusation, just as Syrian troops reach the border ...
Another militant, Mahmoud Hussein, said there were plans to carry out attacks in Syria against security buildings, British and Italian diplomats and vehicles carrying security personnel, said Syria's state news agency Sana on Friday.

One of the terrorists claimed that another source of financing of Fatah al-Islam came from Gulf citizens who were members of the militant group.

Baqi Hussein also said that the car used in the bombing was a stolen Iraqi-registered taxi that operates the Damascus-Baghdad route. The 220 kilogrammes of explosives were reportedly packed in a large sports utility vehicle and detonated by the suicide bomber.

The explosion took place on 27 September at the junction between Damascus international airport and a popular Shia shrine frequented by Iranians, Iraqis and Lebanese, called Sayyida Zeinab in the area of Kazzaz. It was the deadliest bomb attack in Syria by Islamist militants in two decades and the third major attack this year.

Fatah al-Islam emerged in November 2006 when it split from Fatah al-Intifada>Fatah al-Intifada (Fatah Uprising), a Syrian-backed Palestinian group based in Lebanon.

During a bloody standoff with authorities at the Palestinian refugee camp, Nahr al-Bared, in northern Lebanon last year, about 400 people, mainly militants and soldiers, died in the violence and some 40,000 people were displaced.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Syria: Kaddoumi banned from entry
2008-05-07
(AKI) - Syria has banned the president of the political office of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO), Farouk Kaddoumi, from entering the country.

According to Palestinian sources quoted in the Arab newspaper, al-Quds al-Arabi, Kaddoumi intended to go to Damascus in a bid to resume dialogue between the ruling Fatah and the Islamist Hamas movement. Kaddoumi is known for being very critical of the president of the Palestinian National Authority, Mahmoud Abbas. According to the newspaper, Kaddoumi was reportedly looking to revive internal divisions within Fatah to create a new organisation to counter the line taken by Abbas.
It is the third time that Syria has rejected a visa request from Kaddoumi.
It is the third time that Syria has rejected a visa request from Kaddoumi. On the other two occasions he tried to go to Damascus not only to resume dialogue with Hamas but to look at uniting his group with dissidents who left Fatah in 1982 to create Fatah al-Intifada>Fatah al-Intifada, whose headquarters is based in Syria. It seems that the Syrian authorites do not want to be responsible for a new internal division in the Abbas government.

The PLO, founded in 1964 is the Palestinians' highest decision-making body and considered the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
U.N.: Hezbollah not rearming in Lebanon
2008-03-03
The U.N. Security Council has been told there is no evidence that Hezbollah has been rearming in Lebanon south of the Litani River.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon says the organization's Interim Force in Lebanon has found no basis for claims by Israel that Hezbollah is rebuilding its military presence, The Daily Star reported. "To date, UNIFIL has found no evidence of new military infrastructure in the area of operations," Ban said during a visit to Beirut.

A report by UNIFIL to the Security Council warns, however, of "heavily armed military positions" maintained by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Fatah al-Intifada along the Lebanese-Israeli border.

U.N. Resolution 1701 approved last August calls for a cessation of hostilities in southern Lebanon, a pullout of Israeli forces and the disarmament of Hezbollah. It also forbids the presence of paramilitary forces south of the Litani River. "These repeated violations of Resolution1701 undermine the credibility of the Lebanese Armed Forces and UNIFIL," Ban said.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Islamist uprising leader captured - report
2007-10-01
THE military commander of Fatah al-Islam, which led a 15-week uprising against the Lebanese army this summer, has been captured in a northern refugee camp, a camp official said today. "Nasser Ismail was captured by a (Palestinian) security force in the camp of Beddawi," Abu Ali Fares, a spokesman for Palestinian factions in the refugee camp said.

"The force raided the house of a relative of Nasser Ismail and found him hiding in the attic with another person," Mr Fares said. "He was taken aboard a Red Crescent ambulance during the night of Sunday to Monday. He was handed over to the (Lebanese) army intelligence services."

Beddawi camp is where many of the civilians driven from their homes in the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp further north by the fighting between Fatah al-Islam and the army were given emergency shelter. Ismail's wife remains in Beddawi, where, as in Lebanon's other camps, security is left to the Palestinian factions by longstanding convention, Mr Fares said.

Khalil Dib, an official of the Palestinian faction Fatah al-Intifada, said that Ismail told him while in the custody of the Palestinian forces that he had been in Nahr al-Bared until Saturday before heading to Beddawi. Since Nahr al-Bared fell on September 2, the Lebanese army has been combing the whole area for fugitive militants, including Fatah al-Islam leader Shaker al-Abssi. Dib said that according to Ismail, "Shaker al-Abssi left Nahr al-Bared one month before the end of the battle" on September 2.

More than 400 people died in the fighting between the Lebanese army and Fatah al-Islam, including at least 222 Islamists. One more soldier died last Friday, raising the army's losses to 168.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Sporadic explosions and gunfire continue at Nahr al-Bared
2007-09-05
There have been explosions and gunfire at a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon, one day after troops captured it from Islamist militants. Lebanese soldiers were seen rushing into Nahr al-Bared to hunt down a number of Fatah al-Islam fighters who survived the offensive on Sunday. Earlier, troops combed the camp's heavily bombed buildings looking for booby traps and unexploded munitions.

More than 300 people died during the 105-day siege, more than half of the losses were soldiers. The Lebanese army said on Monday it lost 163 soldiers in the battles of Nahr al-Bared. 400 to 500 soldiers were injured in the fighting, many of them were permanently disabled.

Intense fighting
The hour of intense fighting erupted near the eastern edge of Nahr al-Bared on Monday as army units patrolled through the camp in search for remnants of Fatah al-Islam. The BBC's Mike Sergeant, outside the camp, says he heard more than a dozen powerful explosions and several bursts of gunfire. However, the Lebanese army now appears to have re-established its control.

Local LBC TV reported later that two soldiers were injured in the clashes, which it said started after several gunmen opened fire on troops and threw a hand grenade. The army responded with gun and artillery fire, LBC added.

The blasts came as local residents celebrated the end of the three-month siege on close to the camp and in nearby Tripoli. Helicopters flew overhead as drivers hooted their horns and young men danced in the road.

Thousands of refugees are demanding an early return to the camp, but from the edge of the camp our correspondent says the devastation inside is clearly visible. Almost every building has been badly damaged, many have been completely destroyed. Clouds of black smoke continue to rise from the rubble.

'State control'
At least 39 militants and three soldiers were killed, the army said, after militants attempted to break out of the besieged camp at dawn on Sunday. Another 20 militants were said to have been captured. Prime Minister Fouad Siniora made a televised speech to the country saying the capture of the camp was "an hour of pride, victory and joy". Mr Siniora said the Lebanese government would rebuild Nahr al-Bared but added that the camp would be placed under the authority of "only the Lebanese state".

Historically, UN-administered Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon have been self-governing and beyond the control the state.
Thereby raping the state's sovreignty.
Fatah al-Islam, which has been linked to al-Qaeda, emerged in 2006 when it split from Fatah al-Intifada (Fatah Uprising), a Syrian-backed Palestinian group based in Lebanon. The Lebanese government has also linked Fatah al-Islam to the Syrian intelligence services. Officials in Damascus and Fatah al-Islam spokesmen denied the connection.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Suicide bomber may have killed UN soldiers in south Lebanon
2007-06-25
The Lebanese Police has reported that the blast that has killed 6 Spanish UNIFIL soldiers and injured 5 others could have most probably been caused by a suicide bomber using a Renault Rapide car. The UNIFIL has not yet confirmed the Lebanese police report about the Suicide bomber theory.

The previous report said Five Spanish United Nations soldiers were killed and six were injured Sunday when 2 Spanish vehicles of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon were rocked by recently planted and remotely controlled Bomb blast in the Marjeyoun-Khiyam area in southern Lebanon. The reports issued immediately after the incident, said the blast was cause by a landmine but could not determine how recently it was planted . The whole border region is thick with mines, cluster bombs and other unexploded ordnance left over from last year's war between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas, and previous conflicts. Israel has refused to give the UN the maps that show the location of the mines, despite repeated requests. Early reports also said 4 were killed and 3 were injured

UNIFIL said the two U.N. vehicles were badly damaged in the explosion. Residents said ammunition in one U.N. troop carrier exploded after the blast, because it was transporting fuel and ammunition.

Hezbollah has condemned the incident which it described as being "suspicious". No organization claimed responsibility but forces affiliated with al-Qaeda, like Fatah al-Islam, who have been battling the Lebanese army since May 20 in northern Lebanon have threatened to hit UNIFIL forces in southern Lebanon. "During questioning, some members of Fatah al-Islam confessed that one of the main aims of their group was to carry out attacks on UNIFIL in southern Lebanon," one Lebanese security source said.

Fatah al-Islam spokesman Abu Selim had threatened to hit the UNIFIL force after accusing them of helping the Lebanese army shelling their bases in Nahr al-Bared Palestinian refugee camp.

The Lebanese parliament majority claims that Fatah al-Islam is a Syrian sponsored group of militants and say it is an offshoot of Fatah al-Intifadah , an operation of the Syrian Intelligence , created to destabilize the Palestinian refugee camps and undermine Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement. Syria denied any connections with the militant group, but refused to hand over its leader Shaker el Absi to the Jordanians when they asked for his extradition. Absi, the Fatah al Islam leader was sentenced to death by Jordan for the murder of a US diplomat .

Lebanese politicians flocked to condemn the bombing, which Saad al-Hariri, Sunni leader of the ruling Western-backed coalition, described as "a grave terrorist attack". Prime Minister Fouad Siniora called his Spanish counterpart to decry the bombing, which he said would "only increase the Lebanese government's determination to implement (U.N. Security Council) resolution 1701 literally and step up cooperation between the Lebanese army and UNIFIL".

In Paris, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice joined French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner in denouncing the attack on the Spanish U.N. soldiers. "I join you in absolutely condemning any attack that was launched against them," she said.

Spain has 1,100 troops serving in the UNIFIL force which patrols the south and Lebanese coastal waters. UNIFIL has suffered 260 fatalities since it was set up after an Israeli invasion in 1978. The dead include 250 troops, two military observers, four international and four local staff.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Fatah mainstream kills 3 Fatal al-Islam militants in north Lebanon
2007-06-25
Fighters of the Fatah mainstream organization that is headed by Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas have entered the Nahr el-Bared Palestinian refugee camp and killed 3 Fatah al-Islam militants The above was based on information provided by Abu Emad Allouni , Fatah mainstream representative at the camp.

Abbas has voiced his strong support to the Lebanese government in its fight against Fatah Al-Islam, who have absolutely no relationship whatsoever with Fatah mainstream according to him. Fatah al-Islam is a branch of Fatah al-Intifada, which is part of the Syrian intelligence operation , created to oppose Yasser Arafat's Fatah organization and to destabilize the Palestinian camps in Lebanon.
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