Fragile truce lets Palestinians flee Lebanon camp

Thousands of Palestinians fled a battered refugee camp in north Lebanon tonight when a fragile truce eased three days of fierce…

Thousands of Palestinians fled a battered refugee camp in north Lebanon tonight when a fragile truce eased three days of fierce battles between Lebanese army troops and Islamist militants.

Flying white flags from their car windows, up to 10 people crammed into some vehicles as they fled Nahr al-Bared camp. But the truce was interrupted by sporadic gunfire and residents begged visiting reporters to evacuate them.

Two people lay in pools of blood in the street. It was unclear if they were dead or wounded. A man trying to carry a wounded woman to safety left her in the street when bullets began flying.

Aid groups used the periods of calm to deliver essential supplies to the camp. But some UN aid trucks withdrew when shells exploded near their convoy, killing at least two youths as they tried to collect bread, witnesses said.

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At least 22 militants, 32 soldiers and 27 civilians have been killed since the army and the militant Islamist group Fatah al-Islam began fighting on Sunday, making it Lebanon 's worst internal violence since the 1975-1990 civil war.

Residents said bodies were buried under the rubble of buildings. There were several conflicting and unconfirmed reports of the civilian death toll in the camp. Fifty-five soldiers have also been wounded.

Heavy fighting at Nahr al-Bared camp, home to 40,000 people near the northern city of Tripoli, raged from dawn until afternoon. Fatah al-Islam, an al Qaeda-inspired Sunni Muslim group has been based in the camp since last year.

Clashes died down after the group said it would cease fire if the army did the same. The fighting prompted Palestinians in other refugee camps to protest against the army and government.

Shocked camp residents emerged from their homes to see the destruction. Shell fire had torn huge holes in buildings. Gunmen roamed the rubble-strewn street.

"What the hell were they (the army) doing? Did they think they were fighting the Israeli army?" resident Mahmoud Tayyar asked.

Fatah al-Islam has little local support, but the firepower the army has turned on the camp has begun to anger Palestinians.

"We have seen many wars but never seen bombardment in this way. Entire areas have been destroyed," Jamal Laila, 40, said by earlier. "Children have no milk, water or bread.

"For the sake of 10, 20 or 30 individuals an entire camp is being massacred," he said, weeping over the phone.