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  • Thousands of Australians in Lebanon

    Thousands of Australians in Lebanon

    The West Australian, Australia
    July 16 2006

    The federal government is being called on to help thousands of
    Australians flee Lebanon following open conflict between Israel and
    the Lebanese militant group Hizbollah.

    But it claims there is no longer a safe way to rescue almost 3,000
    Australians travelling in the war-torn country, nor the 25,000 members
    of the Australian Lebanese community who live there.

    "There is no way at the moment for anyone to leave and the sea ports
    are dangerous, the road and the highway's been damaged and also the
    airport," Teresa Gambaro, parliamentary secretary to the Foreign
    Affairs Minister, said.

    "There's no means, no transportation mode, that is safe to us at the
    moment and, in fact, we would be putting Australians at risk if we
    advised them to leave at this time."

    As the violence increases, there is mounting criticism the government
    was too slow to decide it must evacuate its citizens.

    The parents of 57 young Australians stranded in Beirut lashed out
    at the prime minister on Saturday, accusing John Howard of not doing
    enough to help their children.

    "There is a lot of anger, and a lot of frustration," said Rosemary
    Diodati, who has 12 members of her extended family, including two of
    her children, stranded in Lebanon.

    "I don't think they (the government) are doing enough. We want them
    out and we want them safe and sound. You don't just say stay put -
    stay put until when?"

    About 78 members of the Sydney Armenian Community dance group,
    including young children, teens and young adults, are trapped in
    Beirut as Israel's devastating bombing raids continue.

    The attacks began after Hizbollah launched a cross-border raid on
    Wednesday killing eight Israeli soldiers and kidnapping two others.

    On Saturday, Hizbollah's chief all but declared war on its neighbour.

    "You wanted open war. We are going to open war," Sayyed Hassan
    Nasrallah said in a call to Hizbollah's television.

    Ms Gambaro urged people in Australia to contact family members in
    Lebanon and get them to register with the Australian embassy in Beirut.

    But some of the last Australians to flee the war-torn country,
    touching down at Sydney Airport on Saturday night, said the embassy
    had been slow to act.

    Rosemary Haddad, back in Australia with her husband and three
    children, spent more than a day sitting by the phone trying to call
    the Australian embassy in Lebanon.

    "I was abandoned and I think it's disgusting," she said. "We are
    Australians and we were in a foreign country. We had no idea what to
    do or where to go ... the only people that helped us were the local
    travel agents."

    Escaping across the Syrian border in a car driven by a family friend
    was "like Armageddon", she said.

    "There were cars everywhere, everyone was trying to get out and once
    we got to the airport we had to wait 16 hours before we could get on
    a plane," she said.

    Ms Haddad was one of less than a dozen people who touched down in
    Australia on Saturday night after fleeing the violence.
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