/ 13 August 2006

Israel, Lebanon agree to ceasefire

The United Nations said Israeli and Lebanese leaders had agreed to a ceasefire to take effect on Monday, as Israel reported its worst death toll yet in the month-long war against Hezbollah guerrillas.

Israel, stepping up an offensive in southern Lebanon before the truce, said 19 of its soldiers were killed in clashes on Saturday and that five declared missing after a helicopter was shot down were now feared dead.

The Jewish state’s worst single day for deaths in the war occurred as the UN prepared to deploy up to 15 000 troops to help enforce the ceasefire.

The Israeli YNET News internet site quoted an official in Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s office as saying Israeli troops would start withdrawing from south Lebanon within a week or two when the UN force and the Lebanese army arrived in the area.

Olmert, who has backed a UN Security Council resolution passed on Friday that set out ceasefire terms, was expected to ask his Cabinet on Sunday to formally approve the deal.

Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora said his government unanimously approved the resolution on Saturday, and Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said his fighters would abide by it once Israeli forces also adhered to it.

”I am very happy to announce [Olmert and Siniora] have agreed that the cessation of hostilities and the end of the fighting will enter into force on 14 August [Monday] at 0500 hours GMT,” UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said in a statement.

”Preferably, the fighting should stop now to respect the spirit and intent of the Security Council decision, the object of which was to save civilian lives, to spare the pain and suffering that the civilians on both sides are living through.”

At least 1 064 people in Lebanon and 143 Israelis, including 104 soldiers, have been killed in the war, triggered on July 12 when Hezbollah guerrillas captured two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid.

New raids

Israeli warplanes pounded parts of Lebanon on Sunday, killing two civilians in a strike in the eastern Bekaa Valley. Civil defence sources said one person was wounded when a strike targeted a position of the armed Palestinian Fatah movement in Ain el-Hilweh refugee camp near the southern city of Sidon.

Helicopters lifted hundreds of Israeli troops into south Lebanon on Saturday as part of an expanding offensive. Israel’s Army Radio said on Sunday that almost 30 000 troops were operating in southern Lebanon against Hezbollah.

The Israeli army said it had killed more than 40 guerrillas in 24 hours. Hezbollah denied it had lost 40 fighters.

Nasrallah said Hezbollah would abide by the UN resolution and cooperate with the UN and Lebanese troops, but would carry on confronting any Israeli soldiers on Lebanese soil.

”As long as there is Israeli military movement, Israeli field aggression and Israeli soldiers occupying our land … it is our natural right to confront them, fight them and defend our land, our homes and ourselves,” Nasrallah said.

United States President George Bush welcomed the UN resolution, saying Hiebollah and its main allies Iran and Syria had brought an ”unwanted” war to the region.

”[The resolution was designed] to put an end to Iran and Syria’s efforts to hold the Lebanese people hostage to their own extremist agenda,” said Bush.

France is widely expected to lead the planned UN force, which will expand the existing UN Interim Force in Lebanon but have a stronger mandate.

French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy made clear in an interview with Le Monde newspaper the mission of the new force will not include disarming Hezbollah by force.

A senior Israeli commander, Major General Udi Adam, said some Israeli forces had reached as far as the Litani River in Lebanon. The river is a few kilometres from the border at some points but about 20km away at others.

Adam said at least 500 Hezbollah guerrillas had been killed in the war. Hezbollah has announced less than 100 deaths. — Reuters