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Two Israeli soldiers captured seven killed in Hezbollah attack

UN outlines plan to end Lebanon fighting


BEIRUT (updated on: July 21, 2006, 04:54 PST): Israeli troops battled Lebanese guerrillas on Thursday, the ninth day of a conflict that has killed more than 330 people and set alarm bells ringing about the risk of a humanitarian catastrophe.

UN chief Kofi Annan on Thursday outlined a plan to end the fighting in Lebanon, including a cease-fire, the early release of two captured Israeli soldiers and deployment of a peacekeeping force on the Lebanon-Israel border.

The plan, unveiled before the Security Council, would also involve calling an international conference tasked with ensuring full implementation of UN resolutions demanding the disbanding and disarming of all militias, including Hezbollah, in Lebanon. He also said Israel "must allow humanitarian agencies access to civilians." He suggested that "an expanded peacekeeping force" be deployed along the Blue Line the border between Lebanon and Israel.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice intends to travel to the Middle East as early as next week to press for a political solution to reduce fighting between Israel and Hizbollah guerrillas in Lebanon, her spokesman said on Thursday.

Unlike the United Nations and key European allies that want a cease-fire as soon as possible, the United States stresses the need for what it calls a "durable" solution to the crisis before any cease-fire can be implemented.

A private TV told that four Israeli soldier were killed and others wounded in fighting in southern Lebanon on Thursday. The early saying was three Israeli soldiers had been killed and three wounded. Despite that Israeli media reported eight soldiers had been wounded. An Israeli military source said the firefight took place near the northern Israeli village of Avivim, near an area where Hizbollah guerrillas killed two soldiers and wounded nine others on Wednesday.

Earlier on Thursday, three Israeli soldiers were wounded, two of them seriously, in firefights in the area. The army said two Hizbollah fighters were killed in that clash.

At least 72 people were killed in Lebanon Wednesday, the highest single-day toll since the offensive was launched, sending thousands of Lebanese streaming from their homes to find safe havens.

Thousands of foreigners, mainly Westerners, were also being evacuated by sea from Beirut to the neighbouring Mediterranean island of Cyprus, fleeing an offensive that has now killed nearly 330 people in Lebanon and displaced an estimated half a million others.

Under cover of darkness, Israeli warplanes swung into action over south Beirut, dropping 20 tonnes of bombs on a suspected Hezbollah leadership bunker in the group's militant stronghold, although it appeared to ease off from its usual intensive air bombardments across the country. Hezbollah denied any members had been killed and said the building hit was a mosque.

Defence Minister Amir Peretz warned that Israel would launch a full-scale ground operation if it considered it necessary. "Let no terror organisation feel we would cower from any operation," he said. "We have no intention of conquering Lebanon, but. We will do it without thinking twice."

Israel has made no secret of its desire to liquidate Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and has already launched air raids destroying his offices and residence during its blistering campaign.

The international community was bracing for a humanitarian disaster in Lebanon, where food and medical supplies are running short because of an Israeli air and sea blockade. Israel has put the only international airport out of action, bombed houses, roads, bridges, factories, warehouses and even trucks, creating scenes reminiscent of the country's devastating 1975-1990 civil war.

"The most basic human rights of the population are at risk or are being violated, including their rights to life, health and food," UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour said, warning that perpetrators in the conflict could be held to account for war crimes.

The European Union announced 10 million euros ($12.6 million) in aid on Thursday to help Lebanese fleeing fighting in their country and expressed grave concern over the humanitarian situation in the region.

Leaders of all political groups in the European Parliament issued a statement demanding an immediate cease-fire to allow passage of humanitarian aid and backed the dispatch of a UN intervention force and an immediate start to negotiations.

International diplomatic efforts to end the bloodshed have yet to get off the ground, with Israel's chief ally the United States refusing to back calls for a cease-fire until Hezbollah halts its rocket attacks.

Twenty-nine Israelis, including a confirmed 14 soldiers, have been killed since a Hezbollah attack on July 12 in which two soldiers were captured, triggering the Israeli onslaught.

Israel, which has sent ground troops back into Lebanon for the first time since it ended its occupation in May 2000, has been emboldened by strong public support at home and the lack of a cease-fire call from its ally Washington. But even in Israel, doubts were emerging about the effectiveness of an offensive that has failed to stop Hezbollah fire, eliminate its leadership or push fighters back from the border.

Israel also pressed on with its air, sea and ground offensive on the Gaza Strip, where nearly 100 people have been killed in two weeks, and warned civilians that homes storing weaponry were now targets. Israeli fire and another 17 wounded seven of they fighters from the armed wing of the governing Hamas movement killed two Palestinians.

Although similar leaflets have been dropped on Gaza before, it was the most explicit warning that civilians' homes could be directly targeted in a campaign that has already killed at least 98 Palestinians and one Israeli soldier.

US Marines were out in force to secure a port being used to evacuate American citizens from Lebanon to Cyprus, which lies just 100 miles (160 kilometres) to the west and is being used as the evacuation hub. It was the first time they were operating in Lebanon since they quit the country following a guerrilla attack on their barracks in 1983 that left 240 dead, the worst US lost since World War II.
 
How many more innocent Lebanese civilian lives would it take for Hezbollah to decide the fate of the two soldiers? Kill them or release them but dont let the young, women and old to suffer.
 
Lahori paa jee said:
How many more innocent Lebanese civilian lives would it take for Hezbollah to decide the fate of the two soldiers? Kill them or release them but dont let the young, women and old to suffer.

Killing unarmed prisoners is as much a war crime as deliberately attacking civilians. It is childish to assume the fighting is going to stop as soon as the prisoners are handed over, Israeli generals are saying this live on camera.
 
Lahori paa jee said:
We know fighting wont stop but this is being used as a pretext to attack lebanon.
It should be down there in a written peace treaty.
 
Israel rejects Annan’s cease-fire appeal NEW YORK: Israel has dismissed calls for a cease-fire from United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan and said the military operation, which was undertaken to free two captured Israeli soldiers but has since spread to target all of Hezbollah, will ``take as long as it will take.''

``When you operate on a cancerous growth you do not stop in the middle, sew the patient up and tell him keep living with that growth until it kills you,'' Israel's U.N. Ambassador Dan Gillerman said. ``You make sure it is totally removed.''

The U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Thursday called for an immediate halt to the violence between Israel and Lebanon, saying a cease-fire would be the first step in a broad framework to end the escalating war.

Two Israeli soldiers and two Hezbollah militiamen were killed in fierce fighting during a fresh Israeli cross-border incursion into Lebanese territory, medical sources said on Friday.

Another three Israeli soldiers were wounded, one seriously, when an anti-tank rocket was fired at an armoured vehicle during the battle, the army spokesman said.

Two other soldiers were wounded in another clash between the army and Hezbollah along the volatile border, as the conflict sparked by Hezbollah's capture of two soldiers on July 12 raged on through the night.

US envoy John supported Israel on Lebanon, saying at the UN session that expecting the "terrorist militia Hezbollah to ceasefire was useless."

Meanwhile, two Israeli military helicopters crashed late Thursday on Israeli soil in a collision near the Lebanese border, causing "several" casualties, an Israeli army spokeswoman said.
 
US House voices support for Israel's military campaign in Lebanon WASHINGTON: The House of Representatives, displaying a foreign affairs solidarity, voted overwhelmingly to support Israel pounding on Lebanon and blamed Syria and Iran for the Middle East present crisis.

The resolution, which was passed on a 410-8 vote, also condemns enemies of the Jewish state.

So strong was the momentum for the resolution that it was steamrolling efforts by a small group of House members who argued that Congress's pro-Israel stance goes too far.

The nonbinding resolution is similar to one the Senate passed Tuesday. It harshly condemns Israel's enemies and says Syria and Iran should be held accountable for providing Hezbollah with money and missile technology used to attack Israel.
 
Israel warns residents to leave south Lebanon BEIRUT: Israel warned residents to leave southern Lebanon on Friday as it considered expanding a ground offensive against Hizbollah guerrillas despite mounting casualties and a looming humanitarian crisis.

After 10 days of bombardment which has killed 312 people and destroyed much of Lebanon's infrastructure, Israel has failed to stop Hizbollah cross-border rocket attacks, raising the prospect it may send its army across the border in strength.

Israeli planes dropped leaflets over south Lebanon, warning civilians to leave border towns and villages, witnesses said.

"It's possible that in the coming days our ground operations will increase," Brigadier-General Alon Friedman told Maariv newspaper, adding that many army reserves would be called up.

Nevertheless, the army said Hizbollah was firing fewer rockets into Israel, with only 50 on Thursday, against 140 the previous day and a daily average of 110 since the war began.

Thousands of tired, frightened foreigners fleeing Israel's bombardment flooded into Cyprus, sparking warnings by officials that the small island may not be able to cope with the influx.

"They (the Israelis) are targeting civilians. They call themselves civilised, but they are barbaric," said Habib Kheil, a mathematics professor from Michigan.

Israel's campaign in Lebanon has forced up to half a million people to flee their homes. Bombs have wrecked dozens of roads and bridges, making it hard to reach distressed civilians.

"The siege on Lebanon is not letting humanitarian aid in," said Hisham Hassan, spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). "The south is isolated."

Two ICRC trucks with 24 tonnes of food, first-aid kits and medicine were on their way from Beirut to the southern port of Tyre, where casualties have overwhelmed the main hospital, on Friday in the relief group's first such convoy, he said.
 
Israel confirms holding positions in southern Lebanon JERUSALEM: The Israeli military confirmed on Saturday that its ground forces have been holding positions in two villages in southern Lebanon for several days.

Israeli troops "have for the past several days held positions in two Lebanese villages close to Israel's northern border," a military spokesman told the media.

Meanwhile, Israeli air force has hit 150 targets inside Lebanon during the past 24 hours, the military said Saturday on the 11th day of its air campaign against its northern neighbor.

Among the targets were 11 rocket launchers and dozens of Hezbollah structures and command posts, along with a dozen roads linking Lebanon to Syria, a military spokesman said.

Israel has accused Syria of arming militant group Hezbollah and its air force has repeatedly hit roads between Syria and Lebanon and trucks using them.

Israel began a massive offensive against Hezbollah on July 12 after the Shiite militant group seized two soldiers in a deadly cross-border raid.

The offensive has left 341 people dead in Lebanon, including 305 civilians, and another 1,000 wounded. In Israel, 33 people have been killed, including 15 civilians.

More than half a million people have fled homes in Lebanon in the face of the Israeli onslaught.
 
Israel evacuated part of southern Lebanon BEIRUT: Israeli forces have evacuated an area of Southern Lebanon, which was taken by them few days back but holding several other positions.

Israeli aircraft and artillery pounded Lebanese roads and villages in the path of its troops. Witnesses said the attacks appeared focused on areas across the border from where the Israeli military presence was heaviest.

At least 15 more Lebanese were killed in fresh Israeli air strikes at Tyre brought the civilian death toll to 400.

Meanwhile, Hezbollah carried out rocket attacks at Israel’s northern areas injuring ten people.

The Israeli military confirmed that its ground forces have been holding positions in two villages in southern Lebanon for several days.

Israeli troops "have for the past several days held positions in two Lebanese villages close to Israel's northern border," a military spokesman told the media.

Meanwhile, Israeli air force has hit 150 targets inside Lebanon during the past 24 hours, the military said Saturday on the 11th day of its air campaign against its northern neighbor.

Among the targets were 11 rocket launchers and dozens of Hezbollah structures and command posts, along with a dozen roads linking Lebanon to Syria, a military spokesman said.

Israel has accused Syria of arming militant group Hezbollah and its air force has repeatedly hit roads between Syria and Lebanon and trucks using them.

Israel began a massive offensive against Hezbollah on July 12 after the Shiite militant group seized two soldiers in a deadly cross-border raid.

The offensive has left 341 people dead in Lebanon, including 305 civilians, and another 1,000 wounded. In Israel, 33 people have been killed, including 15 civilians.

More than half a million people have fled homes in Lebanon in the face of the Israeli onslaught.
 
Annan urges Syria, Iran to join ME talks WASHINGTON: UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said Syria and Iran should be involved in resolving the Middle East crisis.

Annan said that Syria and Iran "are two friendly country" that clearly have influence on the militia group, which refuses to recognize Israel's right to exist.

"And therefore, the two countries have to be a part of the solution," Annan said.

"They will have to work with the international community and cooperate with the international community for us to help to find long-term solutions," he said.

"Whether we like it or not, we have to engage those two governments if we're going to find a long-term solution."
 
100 Hezbollah guerrillas killed: Israeli army BEIRUT: Israeli army has claimed to have killed at least 100 Hezbollah guerrillas whereas hundreds of Israeli soldiers are taking part in the fight against the guerillas where they are facing resistance in four villages of Lebanon, according to statement issued by Israeli military.

Since Israeli soldiers are confronted with resistance in four different villages of Lebanon, the troops are engaged in fierce battle home to home, told the statement.

According Arab TV channel, at least five civilians were killed in Israeli air raids in Lebanon Friday, the fiercest attacks in the east of the country since Israel launched its
offensive 10 days ago, police said.

Four civilians were killed and 15 wounded in an intense bombardment of the Hezbollah stronghold of Baalbeck in eastern Lebanon and another was killed near the southern port of Tyre.

Israel warned residents to leave southern Lebanon on Friday as it considered expanding a ground offensive against Hizbollah guerrillas despite mounting casualties and a looming humanitarian crisis.

After 10 days of bombardment which has killed 312 people and destroyed much of Lebanon's infrastructure, Israel has failed to stop Hizbollah cross-border rocket attacks, raising the prospect it may send its army across the border in strength.
 
Hezbollah rejects Annan ceasefire plan BEIRUT: Hezbollah said Friday it rejected a plan by UN chief Kofi Annan proposing a ceasefire with Israel and calling for the release of two Israeli soldiers captured by the Lebanese Shiite militant group.

"It is normal that we reject this plan. The only thing accepted for us is an unconditional ceasefire followed by indirect negotiations on a prisoners' swap," Hezbollah MP Hussein Hajj Hassan told.

"There will be no fredom for the captured Israeli soldiers without an exchange operation," he said.

Briefing the UN Security Council on Thursday, Annan denounced both sides for the violence and proposed a settlement under which Hezbollah would release two Israeli soldiers and a stabilization force would be deployed.

Annan's settlement blueprint calls for an international conference on implementing UN resolutions demanding the disbanding and disarming of all militias, including Hezbollah, in line with Security Council Resolution 1559.

It would also set up a "donor framework" to secure urgent funding for aid, reconstruction and development in Lebanon where Hajj Hassan said Annan "should rather stop the massacres of civilians and review all the Security Council resolutions which have
not been implemented by Israel, before requesting the implementation of 1559."

"The secretary general and the Security Council are taking Israel's side. Despite all these massacres and destructions, they were not capable of adopting a Security Council resolution," he said.
 
Israeli aggression could destroy Lebanon: France
BEIRUT (updated on: July 22, 2006, 15:44 PST): Israel massed thousands more reservists on the Lebanese border on Saturday to mount incursions aimed at destroying Hizbullah positions, warning it would not rule out a full-scale invasion despite increasing calls for a cease-fire.

The New York Times reported the United States is rushing a delivery of precision-guided bombs to Israel, citing unnamed officials.

French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said in Cairo the spiralling conflict could lead to the "destruction of the Lebanese state", while UN Secretary General Kofi Annan warned that an Israeli invasion would see a dramatic escalation of Hizbullah attacks.

Annan also said Syria and Iran should be involved in resolving the crisis.

Residents of Lebanon's south, terror-stricken and exhausted as Israel's air campaign entered its 11th day, waved white scarves as they streamed to safer havens further north after another Israeli warning to flee the frontier zone.

Despite criticism of US support for the bombardment, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice reaffirmed her rejection of what she called the "false promise" of a cease-fire, but said she would travel to the region on Sunday in search of a long-term solution.

The New York Times said the precision-guided bombs were requested by Israel last week after the air campaign began. It said the disclosure threatens to anger Arab governments and others because of the appearance that the US is actively aiding the Israeli bombing campaign in a way that could be compared to Iranian efforts to arm and resupply Hizbullah.

Tehran denies that it arms Hizbullah, saying it gives only moral support to the Shia movement.

Israel's request for rush delivery of the satellite- and laser-guided bombs was described as unusual by some military officers, and an indication that Israel still had a long list of targets to strike in Lebanon, the paper said.

Israel said its aircraft had hit 150 targets inside Lebanon in the 24 hours to Saturday morning, including a dozen roads linking Lebanon to neighbouring Syria as well as suspected Hizbullah positions.

Lebanon has said its army is ready to go into battle if Israel invades, which would sharply raise the stakes in a conflict that in just 10 days has killed close to 340 people, mostly civilians, in Lebanon and displaced more than half a million.

"The Lebanese army will resist and defend the country and prove that it is an army worthy of respect," said Defence Minister Elias Murr, whose forces have so far stood on the sidelines of the conflict.

Israeli Defence Minister Amir Peretz had warned that Israel would launch a

full-scale ground invasion "without thinking twice" if necessary to crush Hizbullah, which has long been a thorn in its side.

But British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, who has drawn Arab criticism for failing to back UN calls for a cease-fire, warned Israel of the dangers of a full-scale invasion.

She told the Financial Times the "very dangerous situation" could be at a turning point where "a miscalculation, a mistake could have dramatic effects and that I find deeply alarming".

But an Israeli military spokesman said ground operations would be necessary to stop Hizbullah rocket fire on Israel, and that a major ground attack had not been ruled out.

Ground operations in Lebanon were "indispensable because the air force can not always destroy underground bunkers dug by Hizbullah, which has put in place an entire fortified network," military spokesman Captain Yaacov Dalal said.

Some 3,000 reservists had already been called up to "clean up the border zone on the Lebanese side by limited operations aiming to destroy Hizubullah's infrastructure," he added.

Israeli police and army said "a number" of rockets landed in northern Israel on Saturday without causing casualties, despite a direct hit on a home in Carmiel.

The Israeli military confirmed that ground forces had held positions in two villages in southern Lebanon for several days but a UN spokesman said it was "not a massive force" and that the Israelis withdrew from one of the villages just before midday. An Israeli spokesman confirmed the pull-out.

The talk of a ground offensive came despite a call from Annan on Thursday for an immediate cease-fire after the worst cross-border fighting in a quarter century that has also killed 33 Israelis.

On Friday, Annan lobbied on behalf of an international security force in the border region that Israel so far has refused to back.

"I think it's going to be a serious escalation" if Israel invades southern Lebanon, Annan told CNN television.

UN envoy Vijay Nambiar, just back from the region, gave a downbeat assessment to the UN Security Council of the chances for peace, saying there were "serious obstacles" to halting the fighting "in the immediate future".

In Cairo, Douste-Blazy warned that the escalating conflict could destroy Lebanon.

"We must note the severity of the situation... and call for humanitarian corridors, call for the immediate cessation of hostilities, find all the conditions for a cease-fire, if not, it will be the destruction of the Lebanese state," he told a joint news conference with his Egyptian counterpart Ahmed Abul Gheit.

Rice said she would meet Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas on her trip.

Again rejecting EU and Arab calls for an immediate cease-fire, Rice said: "I think we are beginning to see outlines of a political framework that might allow the cessation of violence in a more sustainable way."

UN relief co-ordinator Jan Egeland was due in Beirut on Saturday and would also try to visit southern Lebanon to assess humanitarian needs and to launch an international appeal for aid.

Thousands of Lebanese, in cars, trucks and minibuses, are still fleeing southern Lebanon, where Israel's massive bombardment has left a trail of destruction and brought shortages of food and medicines.

Israel's air and sea blockade put Lebanon's only international airport out of action, bombed houses, roads, bridges, factories, warehouses and trucks, creating scenes reminiscent of the 1975-1990 civil war.

"The most basic human rights of the population are at risk or are being violated, including their rights to life, health and food," UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour said.

Olmert said he was willing to open a humanitarian corridor to ease the crisis.

With no sign the international community is closer to brokering a cease-fire, foreign governments continued to evacuate nationals by sea to nearby

Cyprus or overland through Syria.

Britain urged all remaining nationals wanting to leave to gather at a Beirut assembly point on Saturday for its last evacuation ships out.

US marines were in the Lebanese capital for the first time in 22 years to help take American citizens to Cyprus which is being used as the main staging point for the massive evacuation operation.

The Mediterranean island is reeling from the influx, battling to find temporary accommodation and flights for the estimated 70,000 people expected to arrive from Lebanon at the height of the holiday season.

Israel is also continuing its air, sea and ground offensive on the Gaza Strip, where at least 106 people have been killed in two weeks.

The operation was launched with the aim of retrieving a soldier snatched by Palestinian militants and stopping rocket fire.
 
Israel quits one south Lebanon position, keeps another
JERUSALEM (updated on: July 22, 2006, 16:14 PST): The Israeli army said Saturday that its ground troops had pulled back from one of two positions it had been occupying inside southern Lebanon.

"Our soldiers have pulled back from Marwaheen," a military spokesman told AFP.

Earlier a spokesman for the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) said Israel had pulled its troops out of one of the villages where they had been stationed for three days.

"The Israelis have abandoned the position of Marwaheen, about a few hundred meters (yards) inside Lebanese territory, by pulling out two tanks which had taken up position there for three days," UNIFIL spokesman Milos Strugar told AFP.

"They kept four tanks in the village of Marun al-Ras," in the central sector of southern Lebanon, he said.

Israeli military observers said Marun al-Ras, close to the Israeli border, is a strategic location because it lies at 911 meters (3,000 feet) above sea level.

"It is the highest position in southern Lebanon. In clear weather it is an observation post that covers half of Lebanon," Shaoul Kamissa, a former top army commander of Israeli forces in Lebanon, told public radio.

"Holding this position gives the Israeli army the capacity to control... a very important zone," he said.

UNIFIL has monitored the volatile Israeli-Lebanese border for the past 28 years.
 

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