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Qatar pledges
300 troops to Lebanon
BEIRUT—Qatar became the first Arab country
Monday to commit troops to monitor a tense
cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah,
pledging 200 to 300 soldiers to a U.N.
peacekeeping force. Pakistan's prime
minister toured devastated south Beirut
and considered a similar offer.
Qatari Foreign Minister Sheik Hamad bin
Jassim Al Thani said the contribution was
an attempt by the tiny Persian Gulf nation
"to tell the world of the Arab presence,
even modestly, in this force and to tell
Israel that we believe in this decision
and so we want to contribute in
implementing it."
The pledge came after Sheik Hamad held
talks with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan in Doha.
Sheik Hamad did not say when the troops
would deploy, but insisted that the
peacekeeping force must have "specific and
clear duties."
Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz —
leader of another key Muslim country — was
considering a similar pledge as he toured
the Dahieh district of south Beirut, a
Hezbollah stronghold that was pounded to
rubble by Israeli missiles during the
34-day war that ended Aug. 14. Aziz was
due to meet later with Lebanon's prime
minister and president.
"If it helps the settlement of peace,
Pakistan may consider contributing troops
to Lebanon, but such a decision has not
been made yet," the Anatolia news agency
in Turkey quoted Aziz as saying. He
stopped in Turkey before reaching Lebanon.
A debate over the U.N. force's mandate and
the potential dangers to peacekeeping
soldiers has made countries hesitant to
leap in. The planned 15,000-strong U.N.
force is supposed to secure a buffer zone
between Israel and the Hezbollah
guerrillas in south Lebanon.
The U.S., Europe and Israel have been
eager to have Muslim forces among the
peacekeepers, but Muslim states fear they
could be perceived as opposing Hezbollah,
which gained considerable clout in the
region for its fierce resistance to the
Israeli army.
The U.N. cease-fire resolution calls for
Hezbollah to eventually be disarmed,
without specifically directing
peacekeepers to take on that task.
Under the cease-fire plan, 15,000 Lebanese
soldiers are also to be deployed to assert
control over the Hezbollah stronghold
south of the Litani River and to prevent
arms from reaching the guerrillas.
Largely Muslim Indonesia has announced it
would send up to 1,000 soldiers by month's
end after Israel dropped objections to its
participation. Indonesia and Israel do not
have diplomatic relations — nor do Qatar
and Israel.
In Turkey, the governing party was
expected to vote this week to send troops,
amid strong popular opposition.
A total of 878 Italian soldiers had
reached Lebanon by Monday, Italian
authorities said, with the remainder of
the 1,000-strong Italian contingent
arriving in the next few days.
The Italians — the first big wave of
international peacekeepers — bring the
total number of U.N. forces in Lebanon to
3,250, including the 2,000 troops who had
been there before the fighting and 250
French troops who arrived last week.
The main arm of the French peacekeeping
force is expected to arrive next week.
Israeli security officials have said they
expect their army to be out of Lebanese
territory within the next two weeks,
providing sufficient U.N. forces have
arrived in south Lebanon to enforce the
truce.
Israel has not, however, specified when it
intends to lift its air and sea blockade
of Lebanon. Israel says it has to maintain
the blockade to prevent Iran and Syria
from rearming Hezbollah, but the blockade
is also hindering aid and rebuilding
efforts in Lebanon.
Israel unleashed its devastating assault
on Lebanon after Hezbollah guerrillas
seized two Israeli soldiers in a
cross-border raid July 12.
Hezbollah has vowed not to lay down its
weapons, and its fighters have melted away
into the civilian population. The Lebanese
army has made no moves to disarm the
fighters.—Agencies |