Ansar, Lebanon

Ansar or Insar (Arabic أنصار, population 31,970) is a village in the Nabatieh Governorate region of southern Lebanon located between Nabatieh and Tyre, Lebanon, next to the village of Doueir.

Ansar

أنصار

Insar
village
Ansar
Location in Lebanon
Coordinates: 33°23′N 35°21′E
Country Lebanon
GovernorateNabatieh Governorate
DistrictNabatieh District
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)+3

History

Ansar detention camp

During the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon it was the location of a detention camp run by the Israeli military for suspected Palestinian civilians and militiamen captured by the IDF in Lebanon. Prisoners were categorized and then either moved to more secure facilities or released. In August 1983, after several escape tunnels were discovered underground, the 5,000 inmates it had held at the time were moved. An Israel Army reservist who had served at Ansar was quoted in the newspaper Maariv claiming the camp was sitting on top of a tunnel system.[1][2]



It was subjected to Israeli bombing during the 2006 Lebanon War and five civilians were killed.[3][4]

Ansar is the hometown of the poet and journalist Said Fayad (1921 - 2003).

Home of Said Fayad in Ansar








gollark: Amazingly enough, people sometimes don't like being subjected to authoritarian regimes?
gollark: No, it's just China being authoritarian and people don't like it
gollark: I mean, they're not very granular, and probably weird and arbitrary to some extent.
gollark: Why divide by states, though, and why with the exact representative counts which got picked?
gollark: It's the simplest one but also moronically bad.

References

  1. "ISRAEL CLEARS CAMP OF INMATES". The New York Times. 1983-08-28. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-08-26.
  2. "6 Detainees Die in Accident At Israeli Camp in Lebanon". The New York Times. 1983-11-05. Retrieved 2016-08-26.
  3. Mouawad, Jad (2006-08-07). "As Shelling Continues, Few Residents Remain in Towns That Once Took Refugees". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
  4. HRW, 2007, p. 132

Bibliography

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