BEIRUT: The United Nations yesterday warned the week-old truce between Israel
and Hezbollah could easily collapse, a day after it condemned an Israeli raid on
the guerrillas in Lebanon as a violation.
Lebanon's Prime Minister Fuad
Saniora walks past a destroyed building in the southern suburbs of Beirut,
Lebanon, Sunday, Aug. 20, 2006. Saniora, standing amid the rubble of
devastated streets in Beirut's southern suburbs, accused Israel Sunday of
committing a 'crime against humanity' by its destruction of Lebanon. [AP
Photo] |
Senior UN envoy Terje Roed-Larsen said the truce that halted the 34-day war
which claimed 1,183 lives in Lebanon and 157 Israelis had provided the Lebanese
Government with a good chance to extend its authority over all of the country.
"We also do believe that unfortunately there is a tilting edge where things
very easily within the next weeks or months can slide out of control,"
Roed-Larsen told reporters in Beirut.
"This is why it's so important that all parties concerned exercise utmost
restraint in this situation in order to give the Lebanese army the possibility
of deploying fully along all borders of Lebanon, and particularly in the south,
and also to allow the international community to provide troops."
A 30,000-strong force is envisaged for south Lebanon, made up of Lebanese and
UN troops.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan said on Saturday Israel's commando raid on a
Hezbollah stronghold deep in Lebanon had violated the truce that went into
effect on August 14.
Israel said the operation, in which commandos were airlifted into the area by
helicopter, was defensive and designed to disrupt weapons supplies to Hezbollah
from Syria and Iran.
It denied it had violated the UN truce resolution, which allows it to act in
self-defence, and accused Hezbollah of doing so by smuggling weapons.
One Israeli soldier was killed and two wounded when the commandos clashed
with Hezbollah guerrillas near the village of Bodai, 26 kilometres from the
Syrian border.
Hezbollah denied it had suffered any casualties after security sources in
Lebanon said three guerrillas were killed.
The Lebanese Government vowed to crush any attempt on the Lebanese side to
breach the truce, saying anyone attacking Israel would be considered a traitor.
"The army will be very tough in dealing with such an issue," Lebanese Defence
Minister Elias al-Murr told a news conference.
"Any rocket fired from Lebanon will benefit Israel," he said, suggesting such
an incident would provide a pretext for the Jewish state to attack Lebanon.
The minister said he was confident Hezbollah would stick to the truce and not
try to rearm.
Murr said the army now controlled the entire border with Syria and would
crack down on arms shipments. "There is no flexibility on arms smuggling," he
said.
Israeli reconnaissance planes flew over Lebanon yesterday. Witnesses and
Lebanese security sources said high-altitude flights covered virtually the whole
country, from its wartorn south to close to the border with Syria in the north
and east.
(China Daily 08/21/2006 page1)