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Guns
fall silent as Lebanon ceasefire takes hold

By Nayla Razzouk
AFP
BEIRUT
Petroleumworld.com
08 14 06
The guns fell silent in Lebanon on Monday as a UN-brokered ceasefire
between Israel and Hezbollah appeared to take hold after some of the
most intense fighting of the devastating month-old conflict.
Israel had launched an 11th-hour wave of air strikes before the deadline
for a cessation of hostilities in a war that has killed about 1,300
people, displaced hundreds of thousands and laid waste to swathes of
Lebanon.
After the ceasefire deal took effect at 8 am (0500 GMT), Israel began
withdrawing its forces from Lebanon although it said it would maintain
its air and sea blockade that has all but cut the country off from the
outside world.
Israeli forces had pursued their battle to wipe out Hezbollah until
the last minute, shelling areas around Tyre and Khiam in the war-battered
south and unleashing air strikes on the ancient eastern city of Baalbek,
killing five members of the Lebanese army and security forces and two
civilians.
But shortly after 8 am, exhausted refugees emerged from their shelters
in Lebanon to stock up on provisions and inspect ruined homes while
towns in northern Israel that have borne the brunt of rocket attacks
remained deserted.
Warplanes dropped leaflets over Beirut blaming Hezbollah and its Iranian
and Syrian "masters" for the devastation and warning it would
respond to any future attack.
"With its isolationist, reckless and false policy, Hezbollah has
brought you many achievements: destruction, displacement and death,"
said one leaflet.
"Can you pay this price a second time? Know that the Israeli Defence
Forces will return and work with the required force against any terrorist
act that will be launched from Lebanon to harm the state of Israel."
At least 38 Lebanese civilians and four soldiers had been killed Sunday
as fighter jets pounded Beirut and other targets across the country
after some of the most intense fighting of the 34-day conflict.
Seven Israeli soldiers were also killed in action Sunday, and an Israeli
civilian was killed in a rocket attack as the Shiite militia fired a
record 250 rockets at the Jewish state.
The timing for the ceasefire was unveiled by UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan on Saturday following the adoption of a Security Council resolution
calling for a "cessation of hostilities" and deployment of
an international peacekeeping force in south Lebanon.
Both the Israeli and Lebanese cabinets endorsed the resolution, while
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said his fighters would abide by any
ceasefire -- but would also continue to fight until the last Israeli
soldier left Lebanon.
In a sign of potential problems ahead, a Lebanese cabinet meeting to
discuss the thorny issue of Hezbollah's disarmament was postponed because
the Shiite movement was standing by a refusal to give up its weapons.
"This is the moment of truth and they do not want to give up their
arms," a cabinet minister told AFP.
Israel has urged the world to apply UN resolution 1701 firmly, warning
that Hezbollah must be dismantled and the Lebanese army quickly deployed
in the the militia's stronghold in the south.
"The application of the resolution will depend on the will of the
Lebanese government, but especially on the determination of the international
community," Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said.
The United States, Israel's major ally, said it viewed the truce as
a "positive step" but that it would take some time for the
UN resolution to be carried out fully.
The agreement to halt fighting raised hopes of an end to the deadliest
cross-border conflict in a quarter century which has claimed the lives
of close to 1,150 people in Lebanon, most of them civilians, and 156
Israelis.
But with Hezbollah vowing to fight until the last Israeli soldier leaves
Lebanon and Israel stressing that it will respond to any attack on its
troops or rocket fire, it was unclear whether the cessation of hostilities
would hold.
In one of the deadliest raids Sunday, at least 15 people were killed,
including three children, in Israeli air strikes in Beirut's southern
suburbs. Another eight people were killed near Baalbek.
In what the media called the largest ground operation since the 1973
Middle East war, Israeli forces on Sunday had swept through south Lebanon
where Hezbollah is rooted, with some troops reaching the strategic Litani
River which runs as far as 30 kilometres (19 miles) from the border.
A total of 24 soldiers had been killed in combat Saturday -- the highest
single-day toll since the war began on July 12 after Hezbollah captured
two Israeli servicemen in a deadly cross-border raid.
The Litani has served as a tactical boundary for Israel's operations
in Lebanon since it first invaded its northern neighbour in 1978, leading
to a long and bloody occupation that ended only six years ago.
Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres sought to put a positive
spin on the war's outcome despite the failure to stem Hezbollah rocket
fire.
"I think that we have finished more or less the victors both militarily
and politically," he said, predicting that Hezbollah would end
with "its tail between its legs."
The International Committee of the Red Cross condemned the continuing
heavy civilian casualties, saying: "It is unacceptable that after
more than 30 days of ongoing military operations, all necessary precautions
to spare civilian life and those engaged in medical work have still
not been taken."
In addition to the high death toll in Lebanon, more than 900,000 people
have been displaced by Israeli bombardments that have destroyed thousands
of homes, dozens of bridges and hundreds of kilometres (miles) of roads.
"Lebanon will be I think the last state to sign a peace treaty
with Israel," its UN ambassador Nouhad Mahmoud told CNN television.
The UN resolution, unanimously adopted Friday by the Security Council
after weeks of diplomatic wrangling, calls for a full cessation of hostilities,
the deployment of a 15,000-strong international force in southern Lebanon
and then a withdrawal of Israeli forces.
Morocco, Indonesia, Italy, Turkey, Spain and Malaysia have already agreed
to send troops to bolster the UN force there, the Lebanese government
said.
The resolution also calls for the release of the two captive Israeli
soldiers and for a solution to the issue of Lebanese prisoners held
by Israel.
While approving the resolution, the Lebanese cabinet expressed reservations
that it did not go far enough in condemning the large-scale Israeli
destruction and that it failed to address the issue of the Israeli-occupied
Shebaa farms.
AFP
14 07 53 GMT 08 06
Copyright
©AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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