Deadly harvest: The Lebanese fields sown with cluster
bombs
Lebanese villagers must risk death in fields 'flooded' with more than
a million Israeli cluster bombs - or leave crops to rot
By Patrick Cockburn in Nabatiyeh
Published: 18 September 2006
The war in Lebanon has not ended. Every day, some of the million bomblets
which were fired by Israeli artillery during the last three days of the conflict
kill four people in southern Lebanon and wound many more.
The casualty figures will rise sharply in the next month as villagers begin
the harvest, picking olives from trees whose leaves and branches hide bombs
that explode at the smallest movement. Lebanon's farmers are caught in a
deadly dilemma: to risk the harvest, or to leave the produce on which they
depend to rot in the fields.
In a coma in a hospital bed in Nabatiyeh lies Hussein Ali Ahmad, a 70-year-old
man from the village of Yohmor. He was pruning an orange tree outside his
house last week when he dislodged a bomblet; it exploded, sending pieces
of shrapnel into his brain, lungs and kidneys. "I know he can hear me because
he squeezes my hand when I talk to him," said his daughter, Suwad, as she
sat beside her father's bed in the hospital.
At least 83 people have been killed by cluster munitions since the ceasefire,
according to independent monitors.
Some Israeli officers are protesting at the use of cluster bombs, each containing
644 small but lethal bomblets, against civilian targets in Lebanon. A commander
in the MLRS (multiple launch rocket systems) unit told the Israeli daily
Haaretz that the army had fired 1,800 cluster rockets, spraying 1.2 million
bomblets over houses and fields. "In Lebanon, we covered entire villages
with cluster bombs," he said. "What we did there was crazy and monstrous."
What makes the cluster bombs so dangerous is that 30 per cent of the bomblets
do not detonate on impact. They can lie for years - often difficult to see
because of their small size, on roofs, in gardens, in trees, beside roads
or in rubbish - waiting to explode when disturbed.
In Nabatiyeh, the modern 100-bed government hospital has received 19 victims
of cluster bombs since the end of the war. As we arrived, a new patient,
Ahmad Sabah, a laboratory technician at the hospital, was being rushed into
the emergency room. A burly man of 45, he was unconscious on a stretcher.
Earlier in the morning, he had gone up to the flat roof of his house to check
the water tank. While there, he must have touched a pile of logs he was keeping
for winter fires. Unknown to him, a bomblet had fallen into the woodpile
a month earlier. The logs shielded him from the full force of the blast,
but when we saw him, doctors were still trying to find out the extent of
his injuries.
"For us, the war is still going on, though there was a cease-fire on 14 August,"
said Dr Hassan Wazni, the director of the hospital. "If the cluster bombs
had all exploded at the time they landed, it would not be so bad, but they
are still killing and maiming people."
The bomblets may be small, but they explode with devastating force. On the
morning of the ceasefire, Hadi Hatab, an 11-year old boy, was brought dying
to the hospital. "He must have been holding the bomb close to him," Dr Wazni
said. "It took off his hands and legs and the lower part of his body."
We went to Yohmor to find where Hussein Ali Ahmad had received his terrible
wounds while pruning his orange tree. The village is at the end of a broken
road, six miles south of Nabatiyeh, and is overlooked by the ruins of Beaufort
Castle, a crusader fortress on a ridge above the deep valley along which
the Litani river runs.
Israeli bombs and shells have turned about a third of the houses in Yohmor
into concrete sandwiches, one floor falling on top of another under the impact
of explosions. Some families camp in the ruins. Villagers said that they
were most worried by the cluster bombs still infesting their gardens, roofs
and fruit trees. In the village street, were the white vehicles of the Manchester-based
Mines Advisory Group (MAG), whose teams are trying to clear the bomblets.
It is not an easy job. Whenever members of one of the MAG teams finds and
removes a bomblet, they put a stick, painted red on top and then yellow,
in the ground. There are so many of these sticks that it looks as if some
sinister plant had taken root and is flourishing in the village.
"The cluster bombs all landed in the last days of the war," said Nuhar Hejazi,
a surprisingly cheerful 65-year-old woman. "There were 35 on the roof of
our house and 200 in our garden so we can't visit our olive trees." People
in Yohmor depend on their olive trees and the harvest should begin now before
the rains, but the trees are still full of bomblets. "My husband and I make
20 cans of oil a year which we need to sell," Mrs Hejazi says. "Now we don't
know what to do." The sheer number of the bomblets makes it almost impossible
to remove them all.
Frederic Gras, a de-mining expert formerly in the French navy, who is leading
the MAG teams in Yohmor, says: "In the area north of the Litani river, you
have three or four people being killed every day by cluster bombs. The Israeli
army knows that 30 per cent of them do not explode at the time they are fired
so they become anti-personnel mines."
Why did the Israeli army do it? The number of cluster bombs fired must have
been greater than 1.2 million because, in addition to those fired in rockets,
many more were fired in 155mm artillery shells. One Israeli gunner said he
had been told to "flood" the area at which they were firing but was given
no specific targets. M. Gras, who personally defuses 160 to 180 bomblets
a day, says this is the first time he seen cluster bombs used against heavily
populated villages.
An editorial in Haaretz said that the mass use of this weapon by the Israeli
Defence Forces was a desperate last-minute attempt to stop Hizbollah's rocket
fire into northern Israel. Whatever the reason for the bombardment, the villagers
in south Lebanon will suffer death and injury from cluster bombs as they
pick their olives and oranges for years to come.
The war in Lebanon has not ended. Every day, some of the million bomblets
which were fired by Israeli artillery during the last three days of the conflict
kill four people in southern Lebanon and wound many more.
The casualty figures will rise sharply in the next month as villagers begin
the harvest, picking olives from trees whose leaves and branches hide bombs
that explode at the smallest movement. Lebanon's farmers are caught in a
deadly dilemma: to risk the harvest, or to leave the produce on which they
depend to rot in the fields.
In a coma in a hospital bed in Nabatiyeh lies Hussein Ali Ahmad, a 70-year-old
man from the village of Yohmor. He was pruning an orange tree outside his
house last week when he dislodged a bomblet; it exploded, sending pieces
of shrapnel into his brain, lungs and kidneys. "I know he can hear me because
he squeezes my hand when I talk to him," said his daughter, Suwad, as she
sat beside her father's bed in the hospital.
At least 83 people have been killed by cluster munitions since the ceasefire,
according to independent monitors.
Some Israeli officers are protesting at the use of cluster bombs, each containing
644 small but lethal bomblets, against civilian targets in Lebanon. A commander
in the MLRS (multiple launch rocket systems) unit told the Israeli daily
Haaretz that the army had fired 1,800 cluster rockets, spraying 1.2 million
bomblets over houses and fields. "In Lebanon, we covered entire villages
with cluster bombs," he said. "What we did there was crazy and monstrous."
What makes the cluster bombs so dangerous is that 30 per cent of the bomblets
do not detonate on impact. They can lie for years - often difficult to see
because of their small size, on roofs, in gardens, in trees, beside roads
or in rubbish - waiting to explode when disturbed.
In Nabatiyeh, the modern 100-bed government hospital has received 19 victims
of cluster bombs since the end of the war. As we arrived, a new patient,
Ahmad Sabah, a laboratory technician at the hospital, was being rushed into
the emergency room. A burly man of 45, he was unconscious on a stretcher.
Earlier in the morning, he had gone up to the flat roof of his house to check
the water tank. While there, he must have touched a pile of logs he was keeping
for winter fires. Unknown to him, a bomblet had fallen into the woodpile
a month earlier. The logs shielded him from the full force of the blast,
but when we saw him, doctors were still trying to find out the extent of
his injuries.
"For us, the war is still going on, though there was a cease-fire on 14 August,"
said Dr Hassan Wazni, the director of the hospital. "If the cluster bombs
had all exploded at the time they landed, it would not be so bad, but they
are still killing and maiming people."
The bomblets may be small, but they explode with devastating force. On the
morning of the ceasefire, Hadi Hatab, an 11-year old boy, was brought dying
to the hospital. "He must have been holding the bomb close to him," Dr Wazni
said. "It took off his hands and legs and the lower part of his body."
We went to Yohmor to find where Hussein Ali Ahmad had received his terrible
wounds while pruning his orange tree. The village is at the end of a broken
road, six miles south of Nabatiyeh, and is overlooked by the ruins of Beaufort
Castle, a crusader fortress on a ridge above the deep valley along which
the Litani river runs.
Israeli bombs and shells have turned about a third of the houses in Yohmor
into concrete sandwiches, one floor falling on top of another under the impact
of explosions. Some families camp in the ruins. Villagers said that they
were most worried by the cluster bombs still infesting their gardens, roofs
and fruit trees. In the village street, were the white vehicles of the Manchester-based
Mines Advisory Group (MAG), whose teams are trying to clear the bomblets.
It is not an easy job. Whenever members of one of the MAG teams finds and
removes a bomblet, they put a stick, painted red on top and then yellow,
in the ground. There are so many of these sticks that it looks as if some
sinister plant had taken root and is flourishing in the village.
"The cluster bombs all landed in the last days of the war," said Nuhar Hejazi,
a surprisingly cheerful 65-year-old woman. "There were 35 on the roof of
our house and 200 in our garden so we can't visit our olive trees." People
in Yohmor depend on their olive trees and the harvest should begin now before
the rains, but the trees are still full of bomblets. "My husband and I make
20 cans of oil a year which we need to sell," Mrs Hejazi says. "Now we don't
know what to do." The sheer number of the bomblets makes it almost impossible
to remove them all.
Frederic Gras, a de-mining expert formerly in the French navy, who is leading
the MAG teams in Yohmor, says: "In the area north of the Litani river, you
have three or four people being killed every day by cluster bombs. The Israeli
army knows that 30 per cent of them do not explode at the time they are fired
so they become anti-personnel mines."
Why did the Israeli army do it? The number of cluster bombs fired must have
been greater than 1.2 million because, in addition to those fired in rockets,
many more were fired in 155mm artillery shells. One Israeli gunner said he
had been told to "flood" the area at which they were firing but was given
no specific targets. M. Gras, who personally defuses 160 to 180 bomblets
a day, says this is the first time he seen cluster bombs used against heavily
populated villages.
An editorial in Haaretz said that the mass use of this weapon by the Israeli
Defence Forces was a desperate last-minute attempt to stop Hizbollah's rocket
fire into northern Israel. Whatever the reason for the bombardment, the villagers
in south Lebanon will suffer death and injury from cluster bombs as they
pick their olives and oranges for years to come.