At least one member of Lebanon's Hezbollah group has
been killed overnight in clashes with Syrian rebels in Lebanon's eastern
border region with Syria.
Lebanese security sources reported the death on Sunday, saying that
about 15 rebels had also been killed in the violence, east of Baalbek in
the Bekaa Valley.
The conflict in Syria has been increasingly spilling over to its
smaller neighbour, with deadly fighting shaking the northern Lebanese
city of Tripoli, and rockets hitting the Bekaa Valley and Beirut's
southern suburbs.
Syrian rebels have said they will carry out attacks inside Lebanon in
response to Hezbollah's support for President Bashar al-Assad's assault
on Qusayr, a strategic town for rebel weapons supplies and fighters
coming into Syria from Lebanon.
Al Jazeera's Rula Amin, reporting from Beirut, said there were
reports that the latest clash started when Hezbollah fighters came
across rebels setting up rocket launchers close Baalbek.
"It is the first time we have seen a face-to-face clash between
rebels and Hezbollah fighters inside Lebanon," our correspondent said.
"There have been rocket attacks on Hezbollah strongholds in that area
before, and so it is not a surprising development that rebels are
trying to target this town.
"It is significant that there has been a clash inside Lebanese
territory as it shows how determined the Syrian rebels are to target
Hezbollah strongholds. It also shows how vulnerable Lebanon has become
that they were able to cross the border."
Safe passage
Meanwhile, the Syrian government has responded to calls from
international aid organisations for civilians trapped in the flashpoint
Syrian city of Qusayr to be evacuated, as rebel fighters faced a fresh
assault.
Syrian state TV reported that the foreign minister has said
the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) will be allowed into
Qusayr "as soon as military operations are over".
UN agencies and the ICRC appealed to both sides in the fighting on
Saturday to let the civilians, including an estimated 1,500 wounded,
leave the embattled town.
Britain circulated a draft declaration at the UN Security Council, voicing "grave concern about the situation in Qusayr".
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Eyewitness account from Qusayr [Al Jazeera] |
Russia, however, blocked the draft because the UN had failed to speak out when Qusayr was seized by rebels more than a year ago.
The government’s military campaign on Qusayr started two weeks
ago, in an attempt to regain control of the strategic city bordering
Lebanon. It is believed that Hezbollah has sent an estimated 1,700
fighters to support the government's assault.
Syrian forces have recently captured the northern district of Arjun in Qusayr, leaving rebels little chance to escape.
Activists said that escape routes for civilians have become unsafe.
They reported this week that a a convoy of civilians seeking to flee
Qusayr was attacked by Syrian forces.
Ceasefire needed
UN emergency relief coordinator Valerie Amos and High Commissioner
for Human Rights Navi Pillay said there was "an urgent need of immediate
evacuation for emergency medical treatment".
But a humanitarian corridor could only be created if both sides
agreed, Rupert Colville, a spokesperson for Pillay, told Al Jazeera.
"There should be a ceasefire at least and they let the civilians and
the wounded get out and also let some aid in as well. Civilians who stay
behind will need food and water," Colville said.
The control of Qusayr is essential for the rebels as it is their
principal transit point for weapons and fighters from across the border
in Lebanon.
It is also strategic for the government because it is located on the
road linking Damascus with the Mediterranean coast, its rear base.
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Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies
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