15 killed by Hezbollah rockets in Israel's bloodiest day
Posted: 07 August 2006 0259 hrs

KFAR GILADI, Israel : Hezbollah fighters launched their deadliest assault on 
Israel since the Jewish state began its own devastating offensive in 
Lebanon.

At least 15 people were killed and dozens wounded on the bloodiest day so 
far on the Israeli home front.

At least 14 people in Lebanon were also killed by Israeli fire while world 
powers at the United Nations tried to persuade both sides to back a 
resolution aimed at ending 27-day-old conflict.

Twelve members of an Israeli reserve infantry unit who were camping near the 
town of Kfar Giladi close to the Lebanese border were killed in the single 
deadliest rocket attack since Israel launched its offensive in Lebanon on 
July 12.

At least three people were also killed and more than 160 wounded in heavy 
rocket fire on Israel's third largest city of Haifa, as rescuers battled to 
free survivors from the debris of a collapsed, burning building, police and 
emergency services said.

Israeli warplanes later destroyed the rocket launch site at Qana, the 
southern Lebanese village which was also the scene of a controversial raid a 
week ago which left 28 civilians dead.

Israeli planes again pounded Hezbollah's stronghold in the suburbs of Beirut 
and bombed other villages across south Lebanon.

Twelve civilians, a Lebanese soldier and a Palestinian militant were killed, 
while three Chinese UN peacekeepers were wounded in cross-fire between 
Israeli troops and Hezbollah guerrillas.

The tit-for-tat attacks continued after the UN Security Council in New York 
began debating a French-US draft resolution to bring a halt to the war, 
starting with an "immediate cessation of hostilities" on both sides.

The draft was swiftly rejected by Lebanon because it did not call for an 
immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces, something which Israel says is 
possible only when a 15,000-strong international force is deployed to disarm 
Hezbollah.

In Paris, Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy told a radio interviewer 
that France took note of Lebanon's objections, but said he had told Prime 
Minister Fuad Siniora in a telephone call that the resolution could work 
only if it were accepted by both warring parties.

The White House, meanwhile, said it hoped for a second UN resolution on an 
international force within days of the ceasefire resolution, which is 
expected to be put to a vote on Monday or Tuesday.

"We would like to have days, not weeks, for the second resolution which 
would authorize the force, and obviously as soon after that as the force can 
move the better," US national security adviser Stephen Hadley told reporters 
after talks at President George W. Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas.

Russian President Vladimir Putin also appeared to throw his weight behind 
the draft resolution, in a phone call to British Premier Tony Blair.

A Kremlin statement said Putin had "underlined the need for an immediate 
halt to the hostilities in Lebanon which have already claimed hundreds of 
victims and taken the region to the edge of a humanitarian catastrophe."

Fifty-eight Israeli soldiers have been killed, mostly in combat, since the 
start of the offensive following the capture of two soldiers by Hezbollah in 
a deadly cross-border raid. At least 36 Israeli civilians have died in 
Hezbollah rocket attacks.

The Israeli military said it had captured a Hezbollah militant suspected of 
involvement in the July raid but there was no word on the fate of the 
captive soldiers whom the Shiite militant group insists must be exchanged 
for Arab prisoners in Israeli jails.

Hezbollah announced the deaths of three of its fighters in clashes with the 
Israeli army in south Lebanon, without specifying when they had died.

The new deaths brought to 51 the number of fighters whose deaths have been 
announced by Hezbollah since the start of the Israeli offensive.

Almost 1,000 Lebanese have been killed in Israeli attacks, the vast majority 
of them civilians, and more than 3,000 wounded. An estimated 915,000 have 
been forced out of their homes.

Israel had dropped leaflets over the south on Saturday, warning it would 
bombard Hezbollah positions, especially in the main southern city of Sidon, 
which has been swelled by an influx of Lebanese trying to flee the conflict.

The plight of displaced people was another point which Siniora said should 
be addressed by the UN resolution.

Ministers from the 22-nation Arab League were to gather in Beirut on Monday 
to discuss Siniora's own seven-point peace package.

His plan calls for an Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, the 
expansion of the existing UN peacekeeping force in the area, the deployment 
of the Lebanese army to the border and the disarming of Hezbollah 
guerrillas.

Hezbollah's backer Iran has dismissed the UN draft as one-sided, saying that 
the text insisted on the immediate release of Israeli prisoners while the 
fate of Lebanese prisoners was a subject for negotiation.

As for Hezbollah, one of its two ministers in the Lebanese government, 
Mohammed Fneish, said: "When the Israeli aggression ceases, very simply, we 
will stop (fighting) on condition that no Israeli soldier remains inside 
Lebanese land."

Syria, which also supports the Shiite Muslim guerrillas, similarly rejected 
the draft and its Foreign Minister Walid Muallem warned of regional war if 
Syria came under attack.

But in Crawford, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice appealed for swift 
passage of the resolution by the Security Council's 15 members saying it was 
a "first step" to lasting peace.

Rice sought to ease Lebanese concerns about the lack of any reference to the 
need for an Israeli pullout.

"No one wants to see Israel permanently in Lebanon," she told reporters 
after talks at Bush's ranch.

"Nobody wants to do that," Rice said. "The Israelis don't want it, the 
Lebanese don't want it, so I think there is a basis here for moving 
forward."

But she admitted that the resolution was no quick fix for the conflict.

"We're trying to deal with a problem that has been festering and brewing in 
Lebanon now for years and years and years, and so it's not going to be 
solved by one resolution in the Security Council," she said.

"I would hope that you would see very early on an end to the kind of 
large-scale violence, large-scale military operations.

"But I can't say that you should rule out that there could be skirmishes of 
some kind for some time to come."

France's ambassador Jean-Marc de La Sabliere said there could be a full 
Security Council vote on Monday or Tuesday.

But Israeli Tourism Minister Isaac Herzog said "the army will continue to 
act" until the resolution enters into force.

And Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres warned it would take weeks not days 
for the resolution to take effect on the ground.

- AFP/de/ir

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world/view/223485/1/.html




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