Thu, Aug 31, 2006 - Page 5 News List

Israel snubs Annan on Lebanon embargo

SECURITY ZONE For the Israelis, controlling the border and shutting down the shipment of arms to militants are critical issues

AP , JERUSALEM

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, second right, and Alain Pellegrini, Commander of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon, right, lay a wreath honoring the six UN personnel killed during the war between Israel and Hezbollah during a ceremony in Naqura, Lebanon, on Tuesday.

PHOTO: EPA

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan demanded that Israel lift its air and sea blockade of Lebanon, but Israel said it would only consider removing the embargo once it is assured that forces deployed on Lebanon's borders can stop new weapons shipments to Hezbollah militants.

The dispute on Tuesday was the latest threat to the fragile cease-fire that ended 34 days of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah that left much of southern Lebanon devastated.

Annan arrived in Israel from Lebanon as part of an 11-day Middle East tour intended to shore-up the truce, help Lebanon recover from the fighting and secure the release of two Israeli soldiers whose capture by Hezbollah on July 12 sparked the fighting.

"We need to resolve the issue of the abducted soldiers very quickly," Annan said during a visit earlier on Tuesday to a UN base in south Lebanon.

"We need to deal with the lifting of the embargo -- sea, land and air -- which for the Lebanese is a humiliation and an infringement on their sovereignty," he said.

In Israel, Annan met with Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz and spoke to him about lifting the blockade "as soon as possible in order to allow Lebanon to go on with normal commercial activities and also rebuild its economy," Annan said.

Israel has said it will only lift the blockade once it is assured that forces deployed on Lebanon's borders can prevent Hezbollah from importing new weapons to rearm itself for another round of fighting.

Israel wants international forces to help patrol the Lebanon-Syria border to enforce an arms embargo.

Lebanon has said that its troops would be able to secure the border on their own.

Peretz said he told Annan about the importance of controlling the border "and the implementation of the embargo against the transfer of arms and ammunition between Syria and Lebanon."

Annan said Israel was responsible for most of the violations of the cease-fire over the past two weeks and appealed for everyone to work together to ensure the peace holds and "not risk another explosion in six years or 20 years."

Israeli troops are still occupying a security zone in southern Lebanon and have sporadically fought with Hezbollah guerrillas since the truce took effect Aug. 14.

Israel says it won't leave until a sufficiently strong contingent composed of both Lebanese and international troops arrives.

Annan said the UN hoped to have 5,000 soldiers in the region by Friday. That is double its prewar number, but still far short of the 15,000 international troops that are eventually supposed to patrol the border alongside 15,000 Lebanese soldiers.

"Israel will pull out once there is a reasonable level of forces there,"Peretz said without stating what that level would be.

As part of the effort to quickly get international troops on the ground, a five-ship Italian fleet set off for Lebanon on Tuesday carrying more than 800 soldiers to join the UN force.

"We will follow you with trepidation because it is a delicate mission of huge historic significance," Prime Minister Romano Prodi told the soldiers.

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