BEIRUT, Lebanon - Rival Palestinian factions clashed in a refugee camp in
northern Lebanon on Monday, shaking the camp with explosions and wounding at
least two gunmen, officials at the camp said. Lebanon's state-run news agency
said as many as five were wounded in the battle.
 A boy walks in front of damaged apartment blocks in a
southern Beirut suburb August 31, 2006. [Reuters]
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The gunbattle between Fatah Islam
and Fatah Uprising started after an argument between members of the two groups
in the Nahr al-Bared camp near the northern city of Tripoli, said Palestinian
officials in the camp.
The fighting lasted less than 30 minutes, wounding a fighter from each group,
the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons. The
Fatah Islam member was seriously wounded.
State-run National News Agency said the clashes left at least five people
wounded, two of them members of Fatah Islam. It added that officials of
Palestinian factions were holding meetings to try end the tension.
But within several hours, clashes resumed in the evening. Residents said they
could hear explosions, though the cause was not known.
The situation has been tense in the camp, which is home to about 30,000
Palestinians, since Lebanon's Interior Minister Hassan Sabei announced last week
the arrests of four Syrian members of the little-known Fatah Islam group - an
offshoot of the Damascus-based Palestinian Fatah Uprising.
Sabei said those arrested had confessed to being behind the Feb. 13 bombings
of two buses northeast of Beirut that killed three people and wounded 20.
Hours after Sabei's announcement, Lebanese troops took security measures
around the camp setting up checkpoints and searching every vehicle leaving or
entering the area.
Sabei also blamed Syria's intelligence agency in the bombings and claimed
that Fatah Islam's alleged split from the Damascus-based group was a cover and
that the two were essentially the same.
Fatah Islam reportedly split last year from Fatah Uprising, itself a 1980s
splinter of the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's mainstream Fatah party.
Fatah Islam denied Sabei's bombings charges, as did Fatah Uprising and the
Syrian government.