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BEIRUT: Lebanon dispatched nearly 20 tons of medical on Sunday equipment to hospitals in the Gaza Strip which have struggled to cope with a spiraling casualty toll from Israel's nine-day onslaught. Health Minister Mohammad Khalifeh told AFP "19.5 tons of medical equipment needed to treat the war wounded" and 500 kilos of blankets destined for Gaza were flown to Jordan.
"It is equipment necessary for emergency and surgery rooms," said Khalifeh, who was part of a government delegation that boarded a plane for Jordan to deliver the supplies.
Jordan is a hub for humanitarian aid destined for Gaza, where more than 500 Palestinians have been killed, including 80 children, and more than 2,500 wounded since Israel launched its offensive.
After a week of air and sea bombardment launched on December 27, Israel sent in ground troops into the densely populated territory under cover of darkness on Saturday in what it says is a bid to stop rocket attacks from the enclave into Israel.
Meanwhile, leftist protesters in Lebanon clashed with security forces in the vicinity of the US Embassy in Awkar during a Gaza solidarity protest.
The clashes erupted when 150 members of the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP) tried to cut through barbed wire placed by Lebanese police on a road leading to the embassy.
Police forces first tried to stop the demonstrators by using water hoses before firing several tear-gas canisters.
Six people were injured during the clashes, the state-run National News Agency said, adding that among them was an Internal Security Forces officer.
The Democratic Youth Union, the LCP's youth wing, said in a statement that nine protesters were injured.
Another protest was held on Sunday by Palestinian group Hamas and Lebanon's Jamaa Islamiyya in front of the UN headquarters in Beirut.
Almost 5,000 Lebanese and Palestinian protesters held a sit-in outside the UN House in Downtown Beirut. Protesters carried effigies of US President George W. Bush and caretaker Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, both with shoes sticking out of their mouths, as well as flags of Hamas.
Later in the day, Hamas representative in Lebanon Ousama Hamdan surprisingly attended a celebration in Beirut to commemorate the 44th anniversary of the founding of Palestinian movement Fatah, the main local rival of the Islamist group.
Hamdan, who sat beside Palestine Liberation Organization representative in Lebanon Abbas Zaki, delivered a speech during the event, stressing the importance of Palestinian national unity in facing Israel's aggression against Gaza.
Overnight thousands of Palestinians held night vigils and protests in several refugee camps in South Lebanon, torching Israeli flags and pictures of Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
On the security front, news reports on Sunday said the Israeli Army has called up more reservists as part of a plan to beef up its forces on the border with Lebanon in anticipation of possible developments.
Residents in northern Israel reportedly contacted the Israeli Army after hearing explosions near the border with Lebanon.
The army, however, affirmed that the explosions were taking place on the Lebanese side of the border "in an attempt to scare citizens of northern Israel."
Barak earlier warned both Hizbullah and Syria against engaging hostilities, stressing that Israel was not interested in an escalation on its northern border.
Also Sunday, President Michel Sleiman called on all Arab states to enhance their efforts in a bid "to put an immediate end to Israel's aggression on Gaza."
Sleiman described the Israeli assault as an act of aggression against all the Palestinian people and urged Palestinian factions to unify in the face of Israel.
The president contacted a number of Arab leaders to discuss the situation in Gaza, the Presidential Palace said.
Sleiman also discussed ways to end the Gaza war with visiting Iranian National Security Council chief Saeed Jalili at Baabda Palace on Saturday.
Jalili also paid visits to Prime Minister Fouad Siniora and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri.
The Iranian official also met Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the resistance group's Al-Manar television said on Sunday.
Al-Manar gave no further details but said Nasrallah and Jalili, who arrived here Saturday from neighboring Syria, discussed "ways to end the aggression."
Nasrallah urged Hamas fighters in a speech on Saturday to inflict "as many casualties as possible" on Israeli invaders.
"The Israelis are not aiming at a wide ground operation ... They are planning limited incursions with the aim of dividing the Gaza Strip into more than one area in a bid to make the battle easier," he told his supporters via video link in a southern suburb of Beirut.
"This is exactly what they did in Lebanon and I believe that resistance fighters in Palestine are ready to deal with such a scenario," he added.
Berri and Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt said over the weekend that Palestinian unity was the key to achieving victory.
Jumblatt, who sponsored a solidarity gathering in the Mount Lebanon town of Chehim, urged the Palestinians not to "fall in the trap the same way we did in Lebanon."
"In the aftermath of the July war in 2006, we did not make use of the national solidarity that prevailed during the war as we submitted to internal divisions ... You should not do the same," Jumblatt said, addressing Hamdan and Zaki, who participated in the gathering.
On Sunday, parliamentary majority leader MP Saad Hariri condemned Israel's invasion of Gaza and called on the Lebanese to unite in solidarity with the Palestinian people.
Hariri said the international community was responsible for "ending the tragedy in Gaza and putting and end to Israel's open massacre against civilians."
The Future Movement leader also urged France to "do what should be done to protect civilians and end the tragedy."
France is currently chairing the UN Security Council.
Last week, Hariri discussed the situation in Gaza and other issues with French President Nicholas Sarkozy in Paris.
Sarkozy is due to visit Beirut Tuesday to meet his Lebanese counterpart and visit French troops serving with the UN Interim Force in Lebanon. - AFP, with The Daily Star ..(More) |