BEIRUT:
Two Syrian warplanes bombed farm fields belonging to a border town in
northeast Lebanon Monday, high-ranking Lebanese security sources told
The Daily Star, in an unprecedented aerial shelling by Syria of Lebanese
territory since the end of the 1975-90 Civil War.
The farm
fields of Khirbet Dawoud, 10 kilometers inside Lebanese territory, were
the target of the aerial attack by the MiG-type
aircrafts, the sources said.
Following the aerial bombardment, Syrian reconnaissance planes and helicopters flew over the area for a brief period of time.
Khirbet
Dawoud is part of the Arsal region which shares 50 kilometers of border
with Syria. The area is also described as the main point for arms
smuggling between Arsal and Syrian territory.
Security and official sources in the area said no casualties have been reported.
The
security sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said three
rockets were fired in the incident and that the Lebanese Army headed to
the site immediately following the attack, which took place at around
10.30 a.m.
The raid comes following an attack by rebels on a
Syrian Army checkpoint near that border area Sunday night which left
four soldiers and one officer dead.
Earlier this month, Syrian warplanes and helicopters flew at low altitudes over the northern region of Wadi Khaled.
North
Lebanon border villages have also come under shelling from the Syrian
side of the border on several occasions. Some of the attacks have led to
deaths and material damage.
Following last month's attacks on border villages that wounded one Lebanese soldier, Prime
Minister
Najib Mikati instructed Lebanon’s Ambassador to Syria Michel Khoury to
send a letter of complaint to Syria’s Foreign Ministry about “the
continuous shelling of Lebanese border towns from nearby Syrian military
bases.”
Hours after Monday morning’s attack, Kataeb Party MP Sami
Gemayel called on the Lebanese Army to swiftly respond to any Syrian
shelling of Lebanese territory.
“It is not acceptable for the army
to stand by with regard to such violations against Lebanese territories
and the people without doing anything about them," Gemayel said in a
news conference held at the Grand Serail in the capital.
"We ask the army to immediately respond to any Syrian shelling. It is its national duty to defend the land," he added.
The
lawmaker also urged the Lebanese Cabinet to assume its responsibilities
regarding the continuous breaches of Lebanon’s sovereignty.
“The Lebanese can no longer live in light of such tensions,” said the Kataeb official.
The
opposition March 14 coalition, which opposes President Bashar Assad,
has called for the deployment of U.N. peacekeepers along the border with
Syria, which is estimated to be around 550 kilometers long, to put an
end to Syrian violations of Lebanon’s territory.
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