Relatives of Fatah Islam’s deputy commander Shehab al-Qaddour known as Abu Hureira, who was killed on July 31 in clashes with Lebanese security forces, hold his body, wrapped with a white shroud during his funeral in the northern port city of Tripoli, Lebanon Saturday, Sept. 1, 2007. The No. 2 commander of al-Qaida-inspired Islamic militants battling Lebanese troops in a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon for more than three months was buried on Saturday, a month after his death. (AP Photo)
NAHR AL-BARED, Lebanon (AFP) sept 1- Lebanese troops have seized control of the homes of top Islamist militia leaders as they tighten the noose on fighters besieged in a refugee camp for more than three months. An army spokesman said the troops on Friday seized the homes of Shaker al-Absi and Abu Hureira, leaders of the Fatah al-Islam group holed up in the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp near the Mediterranean coast in northern Lebanon.
"The army continues to advance and close in on the last positions of the gunmen who are now in a small area," the spokesman said on Saturday."They are in underground shelters from where they sneak out every now and then to open sniper fire on the soldiers." Abssi is the leader of the Al Qaeda-inspired Sunni extremist group which has been locked in fierce fighting with the Lebanese army since May 20 after its militants attacked army targets in the north.
زائد واحد ستفتح الباب امام المجهول مما يضع البلد على شفير الهاوية.
By Nicholas Blanford,
NAHR AL-BARED, Lebanon (AFP) – Lebanese troops prepared on Sunday to launch a final assault on Islamists holed up for months in Nahr al-Bared camp from where the last women and children have now been evacuated. As Palestinian Ulemas, or clerics, sought a way out for wounded fighters in last-minute negotiations, an army spokesman forecast: "The strikes against the militants will become more intense."
Lebanese government was mulling over severing private Hezbollah phone network connections that started in southern Lebanon and ended up in Beirut and its suburbs, local Naharnet news website reported on Tuesday."We agreed to draw a plan of action for a peaceful resolution of this issue, but we are serious about resolving it because it is a dangerous matter," Lebanese Information Minister Ghazi Aridi was quoted as saying.
Sylvie Groult, AFP,
By ZEINA KARAM, Associated Press Writer 



