Thousands of Syrian refugees have poured into Lebanon over the past two days as fighting between government forces and rebels has flared near the border, a local official said Saturday.
The refugees were fleeing the Qalamoun mountains north of Damascus, a strategic border district with a mixed Sunni Muslim and Christian population where both sides have been massing forces.
"Some 1,000 families have fled to Arsal since Friday," said Ahmad al-Hojairi, a local official in the Sunni Muslim Lebanese border town.
"We are trying to accommodate them in people's homes and in tents, but there is no way we can cover for their needs," he told Agence France Presse.
"We need urgent help from the international community to adequately support them."
The families were crossing the border by car, by motorbike or on foot, he said.
"We expect more to arrive in the coming days as the fighting in Qalamoun intensifies."
Lebanon already hosts more than 814,000 Syrian refugees and is ill-placed to cope with a new influx fleeing the conflict in its larger neighbor.
But Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman warned that Qalamoun area was "witnessing the lead-up to a major battle".
Both the Syrian army, backed by fighters of Hizbullah, and rebels, including al-Qaida loyalists, had sent reinforcements to the area, he said.
"While Qalamoun was relatively peaceful and safe through much of the revolution, there is now near-daily shelling of key areas," Abdel Rahman said.
Residents on the Lebanese side of the border said they heard the sound of heavy shelling from the Syrian side throughout Friday.
Lebanon is deeply divided over the Syrian conflict, with Hizbullah and its allies backing President Bashar Assad's regime and the Sunni-led opposition supporting the rebels fighting to topple him.
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