1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Arab evacuations from Lebanon

August 16, 2012

Five Gulf countries have started evacuating their citizens from Lebanon after Shiite gunmen kidnapped Syrian nationals in retaliation to the abduction of one of its members in Syria.

https://p.dw.com/p/15qbB
Source News Feed: EMEA Picture Service ,Germany Picture Service Relatives of the 11 Lebanese Shi'ite pilgrims that were abducted in Syria burn tires and block the main road leading to Beirut airport August 15, 2012. An air strike on the northern Syrian town of Azaz on Wednesday wounded seven Lebanese hostages being held there, with four others still missing, a rebel commander said. A local doctor in Azaz said 30 people were killed and scores wounded when a government fighter jet bombarded the town where Syrian rebels were holding 11 Lebanese hostages. REUTERS/Khalil Hassan (LEBANON - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST MILITARY) // eingestellt von se
Ausschreitungen - Beirut / LibanonImage: Reuters

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar on Thursday started to evacuate their citizens from Lebanon after Lebanese Shiite gunmen took more then 50 Syrians and a Turkish man hostage in the capital Beirut and the eastern Bekka Valley.

Lebanon's National News Agency reported that the Shiite Meqdad clan had said the hostage-takings were to avenge the abduction in Syria of a clan member, who is being held by rebels fighting to depose President Bashar Assad.

"More kidnappings are to come. We will start kidnapping Arab nationals whose countries are backing the rebels, if our brother Hassan is not released," clan spokesman Hatem al-Meqdad told the German news agency dpa.

Officials at Beirut airport confirmed each of the five countries had sent aircraft to Lebanon to fly nationals home, adding that many Arab nationals had spent the night at the airport to catch flights out of the country.

The abductions raise concerns the Syrian civil war has spilled across the border into Lebanon, which like Syria, is divided along sectarian lines.

Tensions in the country prompted Air France on Wednesday to divert to Cyprus a flight from Paris to Beirut after armed Shiite protestors blocked the roadway to Beirut's international airport with burning tyres.

jlw/mz, ipj (dpad, Reuters)