The Lebanese army fired on
Syrian aircraft that violated the country's airspace Monday, the first time
Lebanon has done so since Syria's uprising broke out nearly three years ago,
security officials said.
The move suggests Beirut is trying to enforce greater
respect for its borders in the hopes of slowing the expansion of the conflict
into Lebanon, where it has exacerbated sectarian tensions and prompted shadowy
groups to conduct attacks that have killed dozens this year.
Also Monday, a U.N. official said at least 15 people
have died of hunger-related illnesses in a besieged area of Damascus over the
past four months.
Lebanese officials said the military fired
anti-aircraft guns at two Syrian helicopters after they fired four missiles in a
mountainous, barren area close to the eastern Lebanese town of Arsal.
Syrian aircraft have frequently conducted strikes near
the frontier, sometimes hitting Lebanese territory. Beirut has protested but
not responded with force.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because
they weren't authorized to speak to the media.
A Lebanese military official could not confirm the
report, but said the army has orders to shoot anything — planes, tanks or
troops — that violate Lebanese territory. The official spoke on condition of
anonymity in line with policy.
There was no comment from the Syrian government.
Local security officials said the Syrians were chasing
rebels who were trying to sneak into Lebanon. Communities on the Lebanese side
of the border dominated by Sunni Muslims have become safe havens for rebels
battling the rule of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Syria's three-year conflict has grown increasingly
sectarian as it wears on. The rebels are largely from the Sunni majority.
Religious minorities, including Shiites, support Assad or have remained
neutral, fearing for their fate if Muslim hardliners come to power.
Those loyalties are reflected in Lebanon, where Sunnis
generally support the rebels, and Shiites support Assad. The Lebanese Shiite
group Hezbollah has sent its fighters to Syria to shore up Assad's forces,
adding to the tensions.
In Damascus, meanwhile, the new deaths from
hunger-related illness highlighted what activists say is the Assad government's
tactic of starving out rebel-held areas.
Rebels seized the Palestinian-dominated Yarmouk
district last year, part of a swath of neighborhoods around Damascus now held
by opposition fighters.
The U.N.'s Relief and Works Agency that supports
Palestinian refugees had until recently shipped food into the area, but has not
been able to do so since September, said UNRW official Chris Gunness. He said
at least five people died over the weekend, but 10 people had died in the
previous months. The dead include men, women and children.
Gunness estimated 20,000 civilians still lived in the
area, where clashes between rebels and Assad loyalists frequently break out.
"If this situation is not addressed urgently, it
may be too late to save the lives of thousands of people including
children," warned Gunness in comments emailed to The Associated Press.
Rami Abdurrahman of the British-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of activists on the ground,
also confirmed the numbers. He said those who died over the weekend included an
elderly man, a man suffering from unknown disabilities, and a woman.
Even though Yarmouk lies in the heart of the Syrian capital,
news of their deaths took weeks to confirm because the area is so tightly
sealed, Abdurrahman said.
Yarmouk before the war was a densely populated
district of cheaply built multi-story homes, but was called a "camp"
since Palestinians came there as refugees during 1948 Mideast war surrounding
Israel's creation.
Government forces are also besieging other rebel-held
areas around Damascus, including the nearby area of Moadamiyeh, where activists
said at least two women and four children died of hunger-related illnesses
through September.
This week, Moadamiyeh's rebels accepted a humiliating
deal where they would receive food in exchange for raising the government flag
over the area.
On Saturday, three small pickup trucks entered with
bread, rice and canned food. Activists said it wasn't enough for some 8,000
people who remain in the town.
Also Sunday, Abdurrahman of the Observatory said the
group had received death threats from other anti-Assad activists, including
hard-line Islamists, who warned they would kidnap or kill the some 230 people
who work for the group inside Syria.
Abdurrahman said the threats escalated after the group
reported that hard-liners had attacked minority civilians simply for not being
Muslims.
Other activists in northern parts of Syria and Iraq,
where the al-Qaida-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant is strong, have
also complained of threats. Dozens have been kidnapped or forced to flee over
the past year, fearing for their lives.
The compliant came as the media rights group Reporters
Without Borders warned that ISIL had stepped up attacks on activists.
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