End This Tragedy Now
Israel Must Be Made to Respect International Law
By Fouad Siniora
Prime Minister of Lebanon.
08/09/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- BEIRUT: A military solution to
Israel's savage war on Lebanon and the Lebanese people is both
morally unacceptable and totally unrealistic. We in Lebanon call
upon the international community and citizens everywhere to
support my country's sovereignty and end this folly now. We also
insist that Israel be made to respect international humanitarian
law, including the provisions of the Geneva Conventions, which
it has repeatedly and willfully violated.
As the world watches, Israel has besieged and ravaged our
country, created a humanitarian and environmental disaster, and
shattered our infrastructure and economy, putting an intolerable
strain on our social and economic systems. Fuel, food and
medical equipment are in short supply; homes, factories and
warehouses have been destroyed; roads severed, bridges smashed
and airports disabled.
The damage to infrastructure alone is running into the billions
of dollars, as are the losses to owners of private property, and
the long-term direct and indirect costs due to lost revenue in
tourism, agriculture and industrial sectors are expected to be
many more billions. Lebanon's well-known achievements in 15
years of postwar development have been wiped out in a matter of
days by Israel's deadly military might.
For all this carnage and death, and on behalf of all Lebanese,
we demand an international inquiry into Israel's criminal
actions in Lebanon and insist that Israel pay compensation for
its wanton destruction.
Israel seems to think that its attacks will sow discord among
the Lebanese. This will never happen. Israel should know that
the Lebanese people will remain steadfast and united in the face
of this latest Israeli aggression -- its seventh invasion --
just as they were during nearly two decades of brutal
occupation. The people's will to resist grows ever stronger with
each village demolished and each massacre committed.
On July 25, at the international conference for Lebanon in Rome,
I proposed a comprehensive seven-point plan to end the war. It
was well received by the conference and got the unanimous and
full backing of the Lebanese Council of Ministers, in which
Hezbollah is represented, as well as of the speaker of
parliament and a majority of parliamentary blocs.
Representatives of diverse segments of Lebanese civil society
have come out strongly in favor, as has the Islamic-Christian
Summit, representing all the religious confessions, ensuring a
broad national consensus and preserving our delicate social
equilibrium.
The plan, which also received the full support of the 56 member
states of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, included
an immediate, unconditional and comprehensive cease-fire and
called for:
· The release of Lebanese and Israeli prisoners and detainees
through the International Committee of the Red Cross.
· The withdrawal of the Israeli army behind the "blue line."
· A commitment from the U.N. Security Council to place the
Shebaa Farms and Kfar Shouba Hills areas under U.N. jurisdiction
until border delineation and Lebanese sovereignty over them are
fully settled. Further, Israel must surrender all maps of
remaining land mines in southern Lebanon to the United Nations.
· Extension of the Lebanese government's authority over its
territory through its legitimate armed forces, with no weapons
or authority other than that of the Lebanese state, as
stipulated in the Taif accord. We have indicated that the
Lebanese armed forces are ready and able to deploy in southern
Lebanon, alongside the U.N. forces there, the moment Israel
pulls back to the international border.
· The supplementing of the U.N. international force operating in
southern Lebanon and its enhancement in numbers, equipment,
mandate and scope of operation, as needed, to undertake urgent
humanitarian and relief work and guarantee stability and
security in the south so that those who fled their homes can
return.
. Action by the United Nations on the necessary measures to once
again put into effect the 1949 armistice agreement signed by
Lebanon and Israel and to ensure adherence to its provisions, as
well as to explore possible amendments to or development of
those provisions as necessary.
· The commitment of the international community to support
Lebanon on all levels, including relief, reconstruction and
development needs.
As part of this comprehensive plan, and empowered by strong
domestic political support and the unanimous backing of the
cabinet, the Lebanese government decided to deploy the Lebanese
armed forces in southern Lebanon as the sole domestic military
force in the area, alongside U.N. forces there, the moment
Israel pulls back to the international border.
Israel responded by slaughtering more civilians in the biblical
town of Qana. Such horrible scenes have been repeated daily for
nearly four weeks and continue even as I write these words.
The resolution to this war must respect international law and
U.N. resolutions, not just those selected by Israel, a state
that deserves its reputation as a pariah because of its
consistent disdain for and rejection of international law and
the wishes of the international community for over half a
century.
Lebanon calls, once again, on the United Nations to bring about
an immediate cease-fire to relieve the beleaguered people of
Lebanon. Only then can the root causes of this war -- Israeli
occupation of Lebanese territories and its perennial threat to
Lebanon's security, as well as Lebanon's struggle to regain full
sovereignty over all its territory -- be addressed.
I believe that a political resolution rooted in international
law and based on these seven points will lead to long-term
stability. If Israel would realize that the peoples of the
Middle East cannot be cowed into submission, that they aspire
only to live in freedom and dignity, it could also be a stepping
stone to a final solution of the wider Arab-Israeli conflict,
which has plagued our region for 60 years.
The 2002 Arab summit in Beirut, which called for a just,
comprehensive and lasting peace based on the principle of land
for peace, showed the way forward. A political solution cannot,
however, be implemented as long as Israel continues to occupy
Arab land in Lebanon, Gaza, the West Bank and the Syrian Golan
Heights and as long as it wages war on innocent people in
Lebanon and Palestine. As Jawaharlal Nehru said, "the only
alternative to coexistence is co-destruction."
Enough destruction, dispossession, desperation, displacement and
death! Lebanon must be allowed to reclaim its position in this
troubled region as a beacon of freedom and democracy where
justice and the rule of law prevail, and as a refuge for the
oppressed where moderation, tolerance and enlightenment triumph.
The writer is prime minister of Lebanon.
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