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Blistering Israeli strikes have
left Lebanon's infrastructure in tatters. (Reuters)
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CAIRO — With the scale of the Israeli destruction
wrecked on the tiny Arab country failing description, few Islamic
charities and civil society organizations are responding to the
screams of Lebanon's little kids, cowering in their parents' arms.
"We have raised an initial 1 million euros to
the humanitarian crisis in the Middle East," Abdul Aziz
Rajab-Ali, Deputy Manager of Islamic Relief UK, told IslamOnline.net
over the phone from London.
Rajab-Ali added that IR, an international relief
and development charity aiming to alleviate the suffering of the
world’s poorest people, has also raised 4 million euros through its
offices around the world.
The US office is launching an international
fund-raising campaign.
"I hope people would respond positively to our
fund-raising calls," Abdul Aziz said.
"But, I have to say that the situation changes
from time to time. The extent of the aid will depend on the enormity
of the disaster and the time this war will take."
Millions of Lebanese are suffering on the dunes of
Beirut and the muck of southern Lebanon under unrelenting and
shambolic Israeli strikes that have claimed the lives of more than 300
people, the sweeping majority of whom are civilians, and wounded
hundreds others.
Beirut international airport has been knocked out,
ports bombed, bridges destroyed, power stations set ablaze and houses
turned to rubble.
Around 15 petrol stations have been blown up, along
with fuel depots and water pumping stations.
The onslaught has also left Lebanon virtually cut
off from the outside world with an Israeli air and sea blockade.
The highway from Beirut to the Syrian capital
Damascus was cut on Tuesday after being repeatedly hit in recent days.
Local Help
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Israel inflicted massive damage on
the tiny Arab country. (Reuters)
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The Islamic Relief official said they would mainly
deliver food, water and blankets to war-ravaged Lebanese.
"Of course there is a difficulty in delivering
aid to the Lebanese, but we are going to depend on locals to show us
the neediest places," he noted.
"These peoples' knowledge of the country is
much superior to ours."
The IR, an independent NGO founded in the UK in
1984, was not the only group responding to the screams of
psychologically scared Lebanese children and families.
"We've earmarked LE 300,000 ($52,000) in aid
to the Lebanese," Abdel Kadir Hegazi, Secretary General of the
Relief Committee at the Arab Doctors' Union, told IOL.
"This amount of money will go for the medical
needs of the Lebanese people."
Because it is difficult for the aid to enter
Lebanon given the risky situation there, Hegazi said, the money would
be wired to Lebanese officials to buy the medical needs from the local
market.
The Cairo-based Union would hold a conference on
Friday, July 21, to raise more funds for the Lebanese.
"This is a people who have been hard tit by
the Israeli military machine," Hegazi said sorrowfully. "So,
we can't be late."
An ambitious campaign launched by the union in
Cairo on Friday, May 5, to raise one billion euros for the Palestinian
people has whetted the appetite of Egyptians, who raced to make
generous donations.
In just a couple of hours, the "Palestine Will
Never Die" campaign got donations worth LE7 million ($1.2
million).
The Union has been delivering medical aid to the
Palestinians and the Lebanese since 1984.
Peanuts
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Many Lebanese lost all they had to
the Israeli offensive. (Reuters)
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Some countries and international bodies have
already announced aid packages to the Lebanese, with the UN estimating
that half a million people have been displaced by the war.
Saudi Arabia has allocated $ 50 million while the
European Commission has earmarked €5 million for immediate
humanitarian assistance to victims in Lebanon.
A United Arab Emirates freight plane carrying 15
fully-equipped ambulances landed Tuesday at Damascus airport as part
of medical assistance pledged by the Gulf country.
The 15 ambulances constituted the first batch of 24
medical vans ordered by UAE President Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan as
part of efforts to help offer medical aid to Lebanese wounded and
injured in the Israeli offensive.
Yet, many believe the pledged aid does not even
come close to quenching the thirst of the Lebanese for help in view of
the massive Israeli destruction, leaving the country's infrastructure
in tatters.
"We don't want their aid," a former
Lebanese official shrieked in an interview with the Doha-based
Al-Jazeera news channel.
"The Lebanese need $ 5 billion as an initial
step to get over the losses they have sustained so far," the man
screamed.