Twitter
Advertisement

Indian tourists flee Beirut to escape Israeli bombardment

About 15 Indian tourists who were stranded in Beirut have fled the city taking the highway to the Syrian border. KSR Menon reports.

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

DUBAI: About 15 Indian tourists who were stranded in Beirut have fled the city taking the highway to the Syrian border so as to escape the bombardment by Israeli gun ships.

But the 13,000 Indian expatriate workers who are spread out across Lebanon have shown resilience and have not shown any signs of panic. “The Indian visitors from nearby countries like the UAE who have come to Beirut have approached us for help. We advise them to leave in groups for Syria from where they can take a flight back home,” the Indian Ambassador to Lebanon Ms Nengcha Lhovum told DNA on phone from Beirut.

“One or two Indian visitors have decided to stay back and see how things develop. Our advice to visitors is to leave as early as possible and the situation has been deteriorating. We are located near the marine drive and yesterday I saw the light house take a hit from the air three times. It is not very comforting,” Lhovum who is from Manipur said. The airport is destroyed and will take months to be operational.

However, there are about 13,000 Indian expatriate workers employed by factories and various outlets in the country. They have been here since the civil war two decades ago and they have not shown any indications of leaving, she said. The Syrian border is two hours away by road and as people flee by road there are miles of miles vehicles creating a traffic jam.

“We have got in touch with the Syrian immigration authorities through their counterparts here so that the Indians get visa at the border to get in. After that they have more options to leave for home,” the ambassador said. There are seven families of diplomats at the embassy. For now there is no decision to evacuate but the situation is being reviewed hour by hour.

“The Israelis have hit food stores also and so sometimes there is a shortage of essential items. But there are logistic problems of leaving by road,” she said.

Some 2,200 UAE nationals who were trapped in Lebanon were airlifted yesterday from Damascus via an air bridge of six flights a day. France which has historical ties with Lebanon has around 20,000 nationals living there and is mobilising military planes and ships to evacuate them.

Bombardment

Hezbollah bombs Israeli city

Lebanese guerrillas fired a relentless barrage of rockets into the northern Israeli city of Haifa, killing eight people at a train station and wounding seven others in an escalation of a five-day-old conflict that has shattered Mideast peace. The Haifa attack came after Israel unleashed its fiercest bombardment yet of Beirut, reducing entire apartment buildings to rubble and knocking out electricity to many areas in the capital.

Beirut bombed in retaliation

Soon afterward, Israeli warplanes hit the south Beirut stronghold of Hezbollah with at least six airstrikes, shaking the Lebanese capital and sending a cloud of thick smoke rising over the neighbourhood. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert vowed that there would be “far reaching consequences” for the rocket attack. “Our government is determined to do everything necessary to reach our objectives,” he added.

148 Lebanese, 23 Israelis killed

Israeli officials blamed Syria and Iran for providing the weaponry that hit Haifa — raising the spectre of a wider regional confrontation. Casualties continued to mount on both sides, Lebanese police and residents said 41 people died in the past 24 hours, nearly all civilians, raising to 148 the five day death toll in Lebanon. In Israel, 23 have died, including 15 civilians killed by rocket fire.

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement