Evacuees Describe Beirut Bombing Print E-mail
Wednesday, 19 July 2006

A British woman who arrived in Cyprus this morning on the first shipload of Britons evacuated from Lebanon described how her children watched from the windows of their home as Israeli fighter-bombers battered Beirut over the past week.

Maria Noujeim, 43, from Portsmouth, has lived in Lebanon for the past 15 years with her husband Joe, a 49-year-old Lebanese national.

They fled their apartment in Hadathm, near Beirut airport, yesterday afternoon and were among 180 people evacuated last night on HMS Gloucester, a destroyer that evacuated 180 vulnerable Britons last night.

"It’s good to be somewhere safe - things just blew up there," Mrs Noujeim said after disembarking at the port of Limassol, with her husband and three children.

She said: "My concern was the children; they were watching the bombing from the apartment every night - the planes coming over, the bombs dropping and the airport blowing up.

"We wanted to leave straightaway because of the children but we have left my husband’s family, including his mother who is on her own. It is very hard and it has been quite emotional."

"It’s hell on earth, it’s escalating day by day," added her husband, Joe, while their five-year-old son, Michael, admitted: "I was a little scared. The house started moving.

"Tony Blair was forced yesterday to defend the Government against accusations that it had taken too long to get the evacuation up and running. France, it was pointed out, had already evacuated almost 1,000 of its citizens through a specially chartered cruise ship.

But although the Prime Minister said that as many as 5,000 people could be picked up from Beirut by the end of the week, the pace of the operation is not expected to pick up significantly today.

The Foreign Office is yet to call for a mass evacuation and the two big warships that could between them carry thousands of Britons to safety - HMS Illustrious and HMS Bulwark - are still some way from the Lebanese capital.

Instead, only the most vulnerable will be offered places on HMS York, another Type 42 destroyer, and HMS Gloucester when it arrives back in Beirut this afternoon. Commander Mike Patterson, the captain of HMS Gloucester, said that the RAF was also planning a few flights into the city today.

There are more than 20,000 British citizens and those with dual nationality in Lebanon and tens of thousands more Commonwealth citizens who could ask for British consular help.

British officials say, however, that many might decide to hang on in Lebanon despite the Israeli air strikes that have killed some 280 people, most of the civilians.

 Source: www.timesonline.co.uk




Digg!Reddit!Del.icio.us!Live!Facebook!Technorati!Spurl!Furl!Blogmarks!Yahoo!

No one has commented on this article.
The author or administrator has closed this item for comments.