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Nations Mobilize For Mass Evacuations From Lebanon

Lebanese-Swedish nationals board on a Malaysian shipment ferry at the port in Beirut, 18 July 2006, as part of an evacuation organized by the Swedish embassy. Photo courtesy of Ossama Ayoub and AFP.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Jul 18, 2006
Tens of thousands of foreigners were fleeing Israeli bombardments of Lebanon Tuesday, as outside powers organised helicopters, warships, ferries and buses in a vast campaign of evacuation.

With Beirut's airport out of operation, many foreign nationals escaped by bus to Syria as others were taken away by ship or helicopter to Cyprus.

Israel has imposed an air and sea blockade around Lebanon but has said it will co-ordinate with foreign governments to allow their terrified nationals to leave.

In London, Prime Minister Tony Blair said Britain now has six ships in the region. They include the Royal Navy flagship, the aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious, and an amphibious assault ship, HMS Bulwark.

"We have taken out of Lebanon the first 60 people and that was done yesterday. The first ship will come today so obviously we can take far larger numbers out," he told parliament.

Earlier British Foreign Office minister Kim Howells said the Royal Navy could be faced with "the biggest evacuation since Dunkirk", when some 330,000 soldiers were evacuated by sea from France in 1940.

A chartered French ferry with 900 people aboard docked overnight in Larnaca, Cyprus, and was awaiting authorisation to reutn for more evacuees.

"I am sad to be going back to France," said Zeina, 40, who was evacuated on the French ferry after a holiday in the mountains with her three children and sister-in-law.

"But I was so frightened by the first bombs. It's such a relief to be here," she said after stepping ashore.

Larnaca will also be the first port of call for thousands of Canadian citizens trapped by the fighting; Ottawa has chartered three ships -- each capable of carrying 900 people -- to help in the evacuation.

An Italian vessel -- with 186 Italians, 58 Lebanese and 49 Swedes and a new-born baby on board -- docked there late Monday.

The United States -- which flew 43 people out of Lebanon Monday on military helicopters, most of them children, elderly and sick people -- has chartered a ship capable of carrying 750 passengers from Lebanon to Cyprus.

The United States has an estimated 25,000 passport-holders in Lebanon.

Russians fleeing southern Lebanon described a harrowing journey along deserted and bombed roads to Beirut as others returned safely to Moscow from the Palestinian territories.

"We went on bombed roads. The most frightening was not the shooting but the total silence. There was no one, not even a dog on the roads," one Russian woman from southern Lebanon told state television.

Syria, which has been criticised strongly by the United States for supporting the Hezbollah militia's attacks on Israel which provoked the Jewish state's onslaught, has offered "safe haven" to foreigners.

Sweden is chartering a 1,600-passenger Greek vessel. Stockholm's ambassador to Cyprus Ingemar Lindhal said 750 of Sweden's 5,000 passport holders were believed to have already escaped overland through Syria.

Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said three busloads of Australians had made it over the border to Syria. Canberra also hoped to charter a boat to bring out up to 600 other nationals, he added.

Philippine diplomats are negotiating with countries near Lebanon, where some 30,000 Filipino workers could be quickly evacuated, President Gloria Arroyo said. Roman Catholic leaders in Beirut are allowing Filipinos to seek shelter in churches.

Some 181 Polish nationals escaped to Syria on six buses which also contained about 30 other people, including Americans, Slovaks and Czechs, said the Polish ambassador to Lebanon, Zygmunt Cybula.

Syria was also the preferred route out for at least 107 Chinese nationals, including three tourists from Hong Kong.

Spain said Tuesday that 113 people, most of them Spanish, had been brought home on board an armed forces Boeing 707 from Damascus, where they had arrived by bus. Some 152 others are expected later Tuesday, the defence ministry said.

At the same time, German, Swiss and Austrian nationals began arriving back in Europe on chartered planes, many again on flights out of Damascus.

In South America, Venezuela said it was coordinating with Colombia and Uruguay to help their own nationals in Lebanon to saftey. Caracas said it wants to help some 400 Venezuelans to leave, but faces the same difficulties as other countries.

Peru said it was seeking to help about 50 Peruvians in Lebanon and another 100 in Haifa, Israel, which has been the target of Hezbollah-launched missiles.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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