LEBANON - Dec 26 - Lebanese Army Dismantles Eight Rockets Aimed At Israel.
Lebanese Army soldiers find and dismantle eight Katyusha rockets
that were pointed south toward Israel. The rockets were found near the
southern town of Naqura, in the border region where an expanded UN
peacekeeping force has been monitoring an uneasy truce since the war in
the summer of 2006 between Israel and Hizbullah, the Shi'ite
militant group. The UN force is based in Naqura, and UN teams were sent
to help the army dismantle the rockets and investigate the episode, said
Yasmina Bouziane, a spokeswoman for the UN Interim Force in Lebanon. The
Lebanese Army released a statement saying that the eight rockets were of
different weights and calibers, but it did not say how they were found.
Hizbullah is the dominant force in southern Lebanon, but there are also
Palestinian camps, where other militant groups bent on fighting Israel
have a presence. In June 2007, three rockets were fired into Israel from
southern Lebanon, but they did no damage and the attack did not provoke
any wider hostilities. The peacekeepers periodically find and destroy
weapons caches. However, Israeli officials have repeatedly complained
that the presence of the peacekeepers and the deployment of the Lebanese
Army to southern Lebanon in August 2006 have failed to prevent Hizbullah
from rearming. Hizbullah's leader, Shaikh Hassan Nasrallah, has
said that the group has rearmed and is better prepared than ever to
fight Israel. For its part, the Lebanese government has accused Israel
of violating UN Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war, by
trespassing into Lebanese territory during brief raids and by violating
Lebanon's airspace with jet flyovers.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Input Solutions
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
|
Reader Opinion