Published: 12:20AM Thursday August 17, 2006
Source: Reuters
As a truce held in South Lebanon on Wednesday, workers dug a temporary mass grave for more than 100 people killed during Israel's war with Hizbollah.
Hospital officials in the southern city of Tyre said up to 126
bodies would be buried together near an army barracks unless
relatives claimed them. Seventy-two corpses were buried there on
July 21 to clear overflowing hospital morgues.
The officials said the bodies had been identified, but relatives
had been unable to claim them in the upheaval of war. The corpses
were earlier reported to have been unidentified.
The tenuous truce, in force since Monday, has prompted tens of
thousands of mostly Shi'ite Muslim refugees to head home, even
though Israeli bombing has wrecked many towns and villages.
Aid agencies are trying to help the returnees, as well as up to
120,000 people who had remained south of the Litani River, some 20
kilometres from the Israeli border, during the war.
"Our major concern is not so much the fact that so many people have
returned to their homes, but the fragility of the ceasefire," said
Robin Lodge, spokesman for the UN World Food Programme.
"We're worried that if it doesn't hold, a lot of these people will
once again be in a perilous position."
Virtually levelled
The WFP on Tuesday took more than 100 tonnes of food, water and
fuel to Rmeish, a border village 25 kilometres southeast of Tyre.
The supplies should last 6,000 people for a month.
The village had been cut off, with no fuel to pump well water,
forcing people to drink pond water at one stage.
Another WFP spokesman, David Orr, said many villages in the south
had been virtually levelled.
"In the town of Aita al-Shaab, 90 to 95% of the town has been
flattened," he said.
"They had been shelled from over the border and then when the
Israelis came into Lebanon they continued to pound it with tanks
and air strikes."
Orr said many people who stayed in the south had moved within the
region to take refuge in Tyre or mainly Christian towns that were
relatively spared from fighting.
"There is severe damage to infrastructure and quite a bit of
shortage in the villages but I don't think the people stayed in the
ones that were heavily bombed. They got the hell out."
In Tyre, the WFP began unloading a ship that docked with 21 trucks,
food, water and fuel for 18 hospitals.
Lodge said one aid convoy was heading from Beirut to a Palestinian
refugee camp near Baalbek in eastern Lebanon and another was
heading to Tyre.
He said a ship laden with 500 tonnes of aid items was expected to
arrive in Lebanon on Saturday from Italy.
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