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UN
Security Council calls for end to Lebanon hostilities
By Tim Witcher
AFP
UNITED
NATIONS
Petroleumworld.com
08 12 06
The UN Security Council has unanimously called for an end to the bloodshed
between Israel and Hezbollah and for the deployment of a 15,000-strong
international peacekeeping force to prevent further conflict.
Resolution 1701, drawn up by the United States and France and adopted
late Friday, also calls for Israeli troops to be withdrawn from southern
Lebanon after an end to the fighting.
The council called for "a full cessation of hostilities based upon,
in particular, the immediate cessation by Hezbollah of all attacks and
the immediate cessation by Israel of all offensive military operations."
But hours after the adoption of the resolution, Israeli aircraft staged
raids throughout Lebanon, targeting roads leading to Syria and destroying
the electricity plant in south Lebanon's major city Sidon, Lebanese
police said, adding that several people had been killed.
While Israel pursued its military offensive, Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert decided to urge his cabinet to accept the resolution when
it meets Sunday, a government spokesman said.
The Lebanese cabinet was to meet Saturday and US officials said it was
also expected to accept the resolution.
But Lebanese acting Foreign Minister Tarek Mitri expressed profound
doubts about the likelihood of the resolution being able to end the
month-old war.
"A ceasefire that is incomplete is not a true ceasefire. A ceasefire
that retains for one side the right not to cease firing is not a ceasefire,"
Mitri said.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice warned Iran and Syria -- considered
Hezbollah's main backers -- to respect the resolution, which she said
should lay the basis for "lasting peace" between Israel and
Lebanon.
But UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said the time it had taken the major
powers to call for a cessation of hostilities had "badly shaken"
world's faith in the council.
The text calls on Lebanon and the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)
to "deploy their forces together" in southern Lebanon, while
Israel must "withdraw all of its forces from southern Lebanon in
parallel" to the deployment.
The first version of the French-US text had not mentioned a withdrawal
and Lebanon had objected, demanding an immediate Israeli pullout.
The text also authorizes an increase in UNIFIL's strength to a maximum
of 15,000 troops from its current size of about 1,190 troops. Lebanon
plans to send 15,000 troops to the south.
UNIFIL will monitor the cessation of hostilities and any permanent ceasefire
and back up Lebanese armed forces as they deploy across the region now
dominated by Hezbollah.
Israel has criticised UNIFIL, which has failed to prevent Hezbollah
attacks in recent years, and demanded a more "robust" international
force in terms of size and powers to restrain Hezbollah be deployed.
The resolution gives UNIFIL the power to "take all necessary action
in areas of deployment of its forces, and as it deems within its capabilities,
to ensure that its area of operations is not utilized for hostile activities
of any kind."
The text did not say which chapter of the UN charter it would be organised
under. The United States had wanted a mandate under chapter seven which
would give it greater military muscle.
This was opposed by Lebanon. But a senior US State Department official
said the force "will be able to defend itself and has a very strong
mandate which you would see in a chapter seven resolution."
French ambassador Jean-Marc de La Sabliere said he thought the extra
troops could be deployed "very swiftly" as it is the strengthening
of an existing UN force and not the creation of a new entity.
A US official said a meeting could be held at the UN headquarters on
Saturday for potential troop contributors.
The resolution also calls for the "unconditional release"
of two Israeli soldiers whose abduction by Hezbollah sparked the start
of the war on July 12.
Lebanon had raised late questions about the status of the international
force and the future of a small parcel of territory, the Shebaa Farms,
which Israel has occupied since 1967.
The text calls for UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to make proposals
to settle the Shebaa Farms dispute within 30 days of the vote.
The US secretary of state called on Hezbollah allies Iran and Syria
to respect the resolution.
"We call upon every state, especially Iran and Syria, to respect
the sovereignty of the Lebanese government and the will of the international
community," she told the Security Council.
AFP 120526 GMT 08 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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