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Peacekeepers are determined to remain at their posts in southern Lebanon

11/10/2024 6:18
        United Nations
        peacekeepers are determined to remain at their posts in southern
        Lebanon despite Israeli attacks in recent days and orders by
        Israel's advancing military to leave, the force's spokesperson
        said on Thursday.
        
        Andrea Tenenti said the Israeli attacks on the peacekeeping
        force, known as UNIFIL, on Wednesday and Thursday had wounded
        two of their members and knocked out some of their monitoring
        capabilities.
        
        "Definitely, this is probably one of the most serious events
        or incidents that we've been witnessing in the last 12 months,"
        Tenenti said in an interview, referring to exchanges of fire
        between Israeli troops and the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah.
        
        The force's 50 contributing countries had agreed on Thursday
        to keep deploying more than 10,400 peacekeepers between the
        Litani River in the north and the U.N.-recognized boundary
        between Lebanon and Israel known as the Blue Line in the south.
        
        "We are there because the (U.N.) Security Council has asked
        us to be there. So we are staying until the situation becomes
        impossible for us to operate," Tenenti added.
        
        UNIFIL said an Israeli tank fired at a watchtower at the
        force's main headquarters in Naqoura on Thursday, hitting the
        tower and causing two peacekeepers to fall out of it.
        
        Israeli troops also fired at a nearby position, damaging
        vehicles and a communications system, and on Wednesday
        "deliberately fired at and disabled" cameras monitoring the
        area, the peacekeeping force said in a statement.
        
        Israel said its troops operated on Thursday near a UNIFIL
        base in Naqoura but said it instructed the U.N. forces in the
        area to remain in protected spaces, then opened fire.
        
        UNIFIL is mandated by the Security Council to help the
        Lebanese army keep the country's south free of weapons and armed
        personnel other than those of the state. That has sparked
        friction with Iran-backed Hezbollah, which effectively controls
        the area.
        
        Tenenti said the attacks had limited the group's monitoring
        abilities but that it still had crucial work to do "assisting
        local NGOs and also U.N. agencies, to bring the much-needed food
        and water to all these villages."
        
        About 1.2 million people have been displaced by Israel's
        escalating operations in Lebanon in recent weeks, including
        airstrikes, artillery fire and ground incursions in the south.
        
        "Thousands of people have left, but thousands are still
        stuck in this area. So deconflicting is very important. That has
        been very, very challenging," Tenenti said.
        
        U.N. agencies and journalists told Reuters that they
        regularly coordinate with UNIFIL when traveling to southern
        Lebanon to make sure all parties know they are in the area.
        
        The Israeli military asked U.N. peacekeepers last week to
        prepare to relocate more than 5 km (3 miles) from the
        Israel-Lebanon border "as soon as possible, in order to maintain
        your safety," according to an excerpt from the message seen by
        Reuters.
        
        In the same period, UNIFIL sent a letter to the Israeli
        military objecting to army vehicles and troops positioning
        themselves "in immediate proximity" to U.N. positions on several
        occasions, including by circling Israeli Merkava tanks around
        their posts or parking next to them.
        
        The letter, dated Oct. 3 and seen by Reuters, said Israeli
        forces had conducted "engineering works" on the outer perimeter
        of a U.N. peacekeeping post that resulted in the Israeli
        position and the U.N. post "effectively becoming one position."
        
        It said those activities were "endangering the safety and
        security of UNIFIL personnel and premises."
        
        The Israeli military had asked UNIFIL to withdraw from its
        posts in 2006, during the last major conflict between Israel and
        Hezbollah, according to U.N. sources. It did not withdraw at the
        time.
        



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