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Kofi Annan visit provokes angry protests in Beirut
By Chris Marsden
1 September 2006
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Kofi Annans ongoing visit to the Middle East has thus
far been a humiliating one. It not only served to confirm how
discredited the United Nations has become in the eyes of the Arab
masses as a result of its readiness to abide by the dictates of
the United States, but also its continued impotence when it comes
to even the most minimal efforts to rein in Israel.
During a visit to Beiruts devastated southern suburbs
in the Haret Hreik area with Siniora, Annan was booed by a crowd
chanting pro-Hezbollah slogans Death to Israel and
Long live Syria. A group of women denounced the UN
for its collusion with Israel. One laid a portrait of Hezbollah
leader Hassan Nasrallah down on the windscreen of one of the moving
vehicles. One resident told the press, To hell with the
United Nations and Annan. Let him look at what the UN and the
United States have done and at all this destruction. This is their
work.
Annan was forced to leave after only 10 minutes.
Later as he visited four UN border posts, where he was met
by residents with handwritten signs reading, Americans and
Israelis are the terrorists.
Timur Goksel, the former senior adviser and spokesman for Unifil,
told the Guardian that the UN was now more unpopular in
the region than at any point in its history. The UN guys
are uncomfortable with the mood; they know there is lot of anger
toward the UN, said Goksel.
In Beirut neighbourhoods anti-UN graffiti adorns the walls.
Stickers reading Unjust have begun to appear on car
windows.
Annans trip to Jerusalem on August 30 was epitomised
by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert scornful rejection of the UN secretary
generals request for even a partial lifting of the seven-week-long
blockade of Lebanon.
While in Lebanon on August 29, Annan had said the sea, land
and air embargo for the Lebanese is a humiliation, and infringement
on their sovereignty. He warned that there was a great risk
of the fighting being resumed if the agreement was not enforced
in full.
After talks with the Lebanese government and Hezbollah before
his arrival in Israel, Annan said that UN Resolution 1701 to end
the month-long conflict was a fixed menu, its not
a buffet, its not a smorgasbord, its not an a la carte
menu where you choose and pick. We are entering the stage of recovery
and reconstruction, we have a chance to have a long-term ceasefire.
He took great pains to reassure Israel that its security concerns
were the UNs primary consideration, promising that the UN
military force, Unifil, was to be significantly strengthened in
the coming weeks. The Lebanese government was, he said, committed
to the task of curbing Hezbollahthe idea that you
cannot have a state within a state, but have to have one authority,
one law and one gun.
Speaking in the Unifil office in Naqura, near the Israeli border,
Annan said that The Lebanese have shown they are serious
about the implementation of 1701 in all the deployments and efforts
they have made.
Later, Annan gave a daily report from Unifil to Israeli Defence
Minister Amir Peretz, showing that whereas Hezbollah had violated
the ceasefire four times, Israel had done so nearly 70 times.
UN monitors cite Israel for violations, including overflights,
resupplying forces and attacks on Hezbollah positions. Under these
circumstances, Hezbollah is showing incredible discipline,
Annan commented. He later told reporters that while he would prefer
that Israel lift its air, sea and land blockade, at this point
he would only ask Israel to allow Beiruts airport to resume
normal operations.
Olmert would not even give him that much.
In the morning of August 30, he met Annan for some 90 minutes
at the prime ministers Jerusalem residence, of which only
20 minutes were in private.
Annans appeals for restraint cut no ice. Instead, at
a joint news conference, Olmert turned Annans words against
him. The ceasefire was, he said, not a smorgasbord. Its
not a buffet. Its a one-time meal. Therefore Israel
could not lift the blockade on one part of Lebanon while not on
others.
He also rejected Annans request that Israel withdraw
its troops completely from southern Lebanon once the UN force
there reaches around 5,000 troops, rather than its full planned
strength of 15,000. Israel will pull out of Lebanon once
the resolution is implemented, he said.
It could take months before a UN force of 15,000 is gathered
together, if indeed this is ever accomplished. So far, approximately
2,500 UN troops are based in the country, 2,000 of which are observers
who were already there before the conflict started, and pledges
from Europe and elsewhere so far fall far short of 15,000.
Olmert also argued that UN peacekeepers should be stationed
along the Syria-Lebanon border, as opposed to Lebanese forces
as stated by the UN and European powers.
Seizing on comments by Annan while meeting with the relatives
of reservists Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser, Olmert added that
the most important aspect of implementing UN Security Council
Resolution 1701 is the unconditional release of the abducted
Israeli soldiers.
His office later issued a statement saying, The prime
minister emphasised that the main part of implementing the decision
was the return of the abducted soldiers to their homes and said
that Resolution 1701 would not be implemented in full without
the soldiers release and return home.
In reality, the unconditional release of the two soldiers is
not included in the 19 action points set out in the
August 11 UN resolution. To make this a precondition for an Israeli
withdrawal provides for Israeli Defence Forces troops to continue
operating in Lebanon indefinitely.
After making these demands, Olmert concluded with a cynical
expression of hope that conditions would soon emerge
for an agreement with Lebanon for the first time since 1958 and
that the ceasefire would become a cornerstone to build a
new reality between Israel and Lebanon.
Clearly angered, Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Siniora responded
that Lebanon will be the last Arab country that could sign
a peace agreement with Israel.
Mohammed Fneish, one of two Hezbollah representatives in the
Lebanese cabinet, said, There will be no unconditional release....
There should be an exchange through indirect negotiations. This
is the principle to which Hezbollah and the resistance are adhering.
After leaving Jerusalem, Annan travelled to Ramallah in the
West Bank for talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Noting that Israels attack on Lebanon had overshadowed its
ongoing assault against the Palestinians, Annan told the press,
Over 200 Palestinians have been killed since the end of
June. This must stop immediately.
He called on Israel to re-open cargo and pedestrian crossing
points in Gaza, stating, I have made my feelings known in
talks with Israeli officials. Beyond preserving life, we have
to sustain life, the closure of Gaza must be lifted, the crossing
points must be opened, not just to allow goods but to allow Palestinian
exports out as well.
The lack of weight Annans urgings carry in Israel was
underlined by the killing of eight Palestinians in air strikes
and gun battles in Gaza City on the day of his visit, including
a 14-year-old boy.
His readiness to kow-tow before the Olmert government was only
underlined by the rebuke made the next day by UN Humanitarian
Affairs chief Jan Egeland over Israels completely
immoral use of cluster bombs in Lebanon. Egeland noted that
civilians were facing massive problems returning home
because as many as 100,000 unexploded cluster bombs remain, of
which 90 percent were dropped in the last 72 hours of the
conflict, when we knew there would be a resolution.
A spokesman for Unicef said 12 people had been killed by cluster
bombs in southern Lebanon since the war ended. Such uncomfortable
facts were not aired by Annan in discussions described by Olmert
as friendly and warm.
See Also:
Europe to send 7,000 troops
to Lebanon
[31 August 2006]
Israel maintains offensive
in Gaza and the West Bank
[29 August 2006]
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