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Howe Islander braves road to Damascus

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  • Howe Islander braves road to Damascus

    Howe Islander braves road to Damascus

    Kingston Whig-Standard (Ontario)
    July 18, 2006 Tuesday

    By: Brock Harrison

    A 20-year-old Howe Island resident is on her way back home this
    morning after a dramatic escape from the war-ravaged nation of Lebanon.

    Carmen Abrajian, along with her 23-year-old brother Mark and his
    girlfriend, Tala el-Bakri, made a daring broad-daylight getaway from
    the eastern Lebanese village of Anjar yesterday afternoon, crossing
    the Syrian border to Damascus, where they were expected to board a
    plane headed for Toronto.

    "They've had quite an adventure," said their stepfather, Stuart
    Renfrew, who lives with Carmen and wife Janet Abrajian on Howe
    Island. Mark lives in Toronto. "The bombs were dropping way too close
    to them. They had to get out."

    The trio had been stranded in Lebanon since Israeli bombs crippled
    Beirut's international airport last Thursday.

    The Abrajians, along with el-Bakri and a fourth travel companion,
    were in Beirut at the time of Israel's first strikes, visiting their
    grandparents in a nursing home.

    They immediately fled to their aunt's house in Anjar, the mostly
    Armenian town of about about 2,500 people roughly 60 kilometres east
    of the Lebanese capital, but were separated from their other friend.

    It appeared as though Anjar would be a safe haven for the trio until
    they could get a flight from Syria.

    But as Israeli attacks intensified, bombs began dropping on the
    outlying areas of Anjar. Roads going from the popular mountain tourist
    town had been taken out, including the main highway to Damascus.

    They were stuck playing cards in a dark basement, with a dwindling
    supply of food, while falling bombs crept closer to their hideout.

    "They were good and scared," said Renfrew, who communicated with his
    stepchildren through e-mail and occasional phone calls.

    Being half-Armenian, the Abrajian kids have visited relatives in
    Lebanon nearly every summer. As Renfrew put it, "it was just like
    sending the kids to granny's cottage."

    Renfrew and Janet Abrajian, Mark and Carmen's mother, had exchanged
    daily e-mails with the pair prior to the attacks on Beirut, sending
    greetings and sharing stories.

    "Then we got one from them that said, 'Turn on the news, this is
    getting bad,' " Renfrew said.

    Prices for commodities like milk and eggs first doubled, then tripled
    in Anjar after supply routes were cut off by bombs. Renfrew wired
    some money to Mark and Carmen, but they were too far away from a bank
    machine to use it.

    "The relatives were stuck with three extra mouths to feed," he said.

    Renfrew registered his stranded stepchildren with the department of
    foreign affairs so the government would at least know they were in
    Lebanon but he said he never heard anything back.

    Phone calls to the department were not returned yesterday.

    By early yesterday morning, the news that the federal government
    was sending ships from Cyprus to Lebanon's west coast to evacuate
    Canadian citizens had not yet reached the Abrajians and would still
    not have guaranteed a safe passage out; Damascus is closer to Anjar
    than the Mediterranean coast.

    Renfrew said this presented his stepchildren with, essentially,
    a do-or-die decision - either stay in Anjar and risk death or make
    a break for Damascus.

    According to Renfrew, the trio were contemplating making the 30-
    kilometre trek to Damascus overnight by foot, since the main road to
    the Syrian capital had been destroyed, until they secured the services
    of a driver who knew the way through mountain back roads.

    He and his wife were "on pins and needles" until they got a brief
    phone call from Carmen yesterday afternoon, late evening in Syria,
    telling him her troupe had made it to the Damascus airport. They
    weren't available by phone yesterday for comment.

    "It hasn't been easy on us these past few days," Renfrew said.

    The violence in Lebanon continues to escalate after Israel began
    retaliation attacks last week in response to Hezbollah's kidnapping
    and killing of Israeli soldiers.

    The day the Abrajians and el-Bakri made their escape, another 40
    people were killed by Israeli strikes.

    [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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