UNSG Briefing To UNSC On Middle East Crisis
TRANSCRIPT
New York, 20 July 2006 - Secretary-General's briefing to the Security Council on the situation in the Middle East
Mr. President,
The bloody conflict that
has engulfed Lebanon and northern Israel, following the
crisis triggered by the Hezbollah attack across the Blue
Line on 12 July, continues to rage. Almost every day brings
a new escalation.
The Lebanese people, who had hoped
that their country's dark days were behind them, have been
brutally dragged back into war. Already, over 300 Lebanese
have been killed and over 600 wounded. And the casualties
are mainly among the civilian population, about one third of
them children. Much of the infrastructure in Beirut and
around the country has been destroyed. Lebanon remains under
an Israeli military blockade, imposed by sea and
air.
The Israeli people, who had hoped that Israel's
withdrawal from Lebanon – certified by this Council six
years ago – would bring security along their northern
border, find themselves under constant Hezbollah rocket
attacks, which every day reach further into Israeli
territory. To date 28 Israelis have been killed and over 200
wounded.
On the humanitarian front, conditions
continue to deteriorate. Israeli operations have made it
impossible for UN agencies and their humanitarian partners
to reach almost any part of southern Lebanon, even to assess
the needs, let alone to deliver the actual assistance
needed.
Lack of access and in situ assessments make
it difficult to determine the exact figures of people in
need. Based on preliminary information provided by UNIFIL,
the national Lebanese Red Cross, and the Lebanese
Government, UN agencies are currently working on the basis
of a combined total of up to 500,000 people affected,
comprising both internally displaced and those under siege.
This includes nationals from some 20 foreign countries.
According to extrapolations of the Lebanese Ministry of
Interior, these figures could likely double.
In
addition, the Syrian authorities report that more than
140,000 people have now crossed into Syria, the majority
being nationals of Lebanon, Syria and other Arab countries.
Mr. President,
Since the fighting began, I have
been in constant touch with regional and world leaders, both
by telephone and during the G-8 Summit in St. Petersburg and
my visit to Brussels. The G8 issued an important statement
which you have seen. But, as I have repeatedly stressed,
what is most urgently needed is an immediate cessation of
hostilities, for three vital reasons: first, to prevent
further loss of innocent life and the infliction of further
suffering; second, to allow full humanitarian access to
those in need; and third, to give diplomacy a chance to work
out a practical package of actions that would provide a
lasting solution to the current crisis.
I repeat:
hostilities must stop. But while they continue, it is
imperative to establish safe corridors for humanitarian
workers and relief supplies to reach the civilian
population.
The humanitarian task facing us is
massive, and must be funded urgently. As early as next week
I hope to issue a UN Flash Appeal, covering an initial
response period of three-to-six months.
Because of
the continued fighting, restrictions imposed by Israel and
the destruction of many roads, the UN Interim Force in
Lebanon has no freedom of movement and is unable even to
provide humanitarian escorts for displaced persons . Its
personnel remain confined to the Naqoura Headquarters and
their positions in the area of operations. One UNIFIL staff
member and his wife have been missing in Tyre since Monday,
when the building they live in was hit by an Israeli
airstrike, and collapsed. We are gravely concerned about
their fate, since the approach road to Tyre is now
impassable and UNIFIL engineers have been unable to reach
the area.
UNIFIL now urgently needs a “window” of
time in which to bring in stocks of food, water and fuel
from Israel for its own personnel. If UNIFIL is to remain
operational, it will also need to distribute fuel supplies
to its positions within the next 24 hours.
We are not
going to desert the people of Lebanon in their hour of need.
But we have to proceed with caution. As we come to their
aid, our Department of Safety and Security has been
coordinating efforts to ensure the safety of staff in the
affected areas from all parts of the UN System, and their
dependents. Most non-essential staff and dependents have
been moved outside the country. Meanwhile we are bringing in
additional humanitarian experts.
Mr. President,
Let me be frank with the Council. The mission's assessment is that there are serious obstacles to reaching a ceasefire, or even to diminishing the violence quickly.
On 13 July
I dispatched an urgent mission to the region, led by my
Special Adviser, Vijay Nambiar, accompanied by Terje
Roed-Larsen and Alvaro de Soto, whom you know well, to urge
all parties to show restraint and to explore ways of
defusing the crisis. Mr. Nambiar and his colleagues returned
to New York last night, and they are here now with me. I am
very grateful to the governments of Spain and the United
Kingdom for enabling them to cover so much ground in such a
short time.
Hezbollah's provocative attack on July 12
was the trigger of this crisis. It is clear that the
Lebanese Government had no advance knowledge of this attack.
Whatever other agendas they may serve, Hezbollah's actions,
which it portrays as defending Palestinian and Lebanese
interests, in fact do neither. On the contrary, they hold an
entire nation hostage, set back prospects for negotiation of
a comprehensive Middle East peace.
I have already
condemned Hezbollah's attacks on Israel, and acknowledged
Israel's right to defend itself under Article 51 of the UN
Charter. I do so again today. I also condemn Hezbollah's
reckless disregard for the wishes of the elected Government
of Lebanon, and for the interests of the Lebanese people and
the wider region.
Israel has confirmed that its
operation in Lebanon has wider and more far-reaching goals
than the return of its captured soldiers, and that its aim
is to end the threat posed by Hezbollah. The mission was
informed that the operation is not yet approaching the
achievement of this objective.
Israel states that it
has no quarrel with the government or the people of Lebanon,
and that it is taking extreme precautions to avoid harm to
them. Yet a number of its actions have hurt and killed
Lebanese civilians and military personnel and caused great
damage to infrastructure. While Hezbollah's actions are
deplorable, and as I've said Israel has a right to defend
itself, the excessive use of force is to be condemned.
But, while Israel has stated its military objectives
to be to “hit Hezbollah's infrastructure and physical
strength”, it has, in the words of the Lebanese Prime
Minister, “torn the country to shreds”. As Prime
Minister Siniora also said yesterday, “no government can
survive on the ruins of a nation”.
The mission
reports many of its interlocutors in the region as noting
that, whatever damage Israel's operations may be doing to
Hezbollah's military capabilities, they are doing little or
nothing to decrease popular support for Hezbollah in Lebanon
or the region, but are doing a great deal to weaken the
Government of Lebanon.
In short, the very Government
which Israel wants to extend its control throughout the
territory has itself become a hostage to the crisis, is less
able than ever to deploy its forces in the areas necessary
to control Hezbollah, and is appealing to the international
community for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire.
Moreover, any analogy with Afghanistan under the
Taliban is wholly misleaeding. Mr. Siniora's government
clearly espouses democratic values. It deserves, and must
receive, all possible support from the international
community.
Mr. President,
Despite our
assessment that a full ceasefire remains difficult to
achieve at this time, I remain of the view that the
international community must make its position clear on the
need for an immediate cessation of hostilities, and a far
greater and more credible effort by Israel to protect
civilians and civilian infrastructure while the conditions
for such a cessation are urgently developed.
Both the
deliberate targeting by Hezbollah of Israeli population
centres with hundreds of indiscriminate weapons and Israel's
disproportionate use of force and collective punishment of
the Lebanese people must stop. The abducted soldiers must be
released as soon as possible, and in any event the
International Committee of the Red Cross must be granted
immediate access to them. The Government of Israel must
allow humanitarian agencies access to civilians. And the
democratically elected Government of Lebanon must be
urgently supported in its hour of crisis.
In addition
to, and in parallel with, these urgent steps, we need to
continue diplomatic efforts to develop, in the shortest
possible time, a political framework which can be
implemented as soon as hostilities cease. Most people in the
region rightly reject a simple return to the status quo
ante, since any truce based on such a limited outcome could
not be expected to last.
The mission has suggested
elements to me which, in my opinion, must form the political
basis of any lasting ceasefire, and on which they have
conducted consultations with the leaders of Lebanon and
Israel. I and my advisers will continue to work on these
elements, in dialogue with the parties and regional and
international partners.
The elements include the
following:
The captured Israeli soldiers must be transferred to the legitimate Lebanese authorities, under the auspices of the ICRC, with a view to their repatriation to Israel and a ceasefire.
On the Lebanese side of the
Blue Line an expanded peacekeeping force would help
stabilize the situation, working with the Lebanese
government to help strengthen its army and deploy it fully
throughout the area. Meanwhile, the Lebanese government
would fully implement Security Council resolutions 1559 and
1680, to establish Lebanese sovereignty and
control.
The Prime Minister of Lebanon would
unequivocally confirm to the Secretary-General and the
Security Council that the Government of Lebanon will respect
the Blue Line in its entirety, until agreement on Lebanon's
final international boundaries is reached.
A donor
framework would be established, with immediate effect, to
secure funding for an urgent package of aid, reconstruction
and development for Lebanon.
A mechanism would be
established, composed of key regional and international
actors, to monitor and guarantee the implementation of all
aspects of the agreement.
An international conference
should be organized, with broad Lebanese and international
participation, to develop precise timelines for a speedy and
full implementation of the Taef agreement and further
measures needed for Lebanon to comply with its international
obligations under Security Council Resolutions 1559 and
1680. The conference would also endorse a delineation of
Lebanon's international borders, including a final
resolution on all disputed areas, especially the Shebaa
Farms. My letter to Prime Minister Siniora of 5 June 2006
covers these issues.
The planning and implementation
of these elements should, as far as possible, be done in
parallel. I repeat, in parallel. I should stress that these
ideas would obviously require further elaboration and
re-working, in close dialogue with all concerned. This
Council would need to consider incorporating the elements of
such a package in a resolution.
Meanwhile, the
conditions for peacekeeping clearly do not exist. The
Security Council will need to decide what to do about
UNIFIL, whose mandate expires on 31 July. In my view, the
continuation of UNIFIL in its current configuration, and
with its current mandate, is not tenable. Should it be
withdrawn? Should it be strengthened? Should it be replaced
with something else altogether? The context is radically
different from that of a few weeks ago.
Mr. President,
We also need a peace track for Gaza –
despite the different issues involved – as much as we do
for Lebanon.
I am gravely concerned about Gaza. Palestinians there are suffering deeply, with well over 100, many of them civilians, killed in the last month alone. After the destruction by Israel of the Gaza power plant, more than a million people are without electricity for most of the day and night. Israelis in the south continue to endure Qassam rocket attacks, though fortunately without casualties in the past month.
I call for an immediate
cessation of indiscriminate and disproportionate violence in
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and a reopening of closed
crossing-points, without which Gaza will continue to be
sucked into a downward spiral of suffering and chaos, and
the region further inflamed.
In my delegation's
meeting with President Abbas he underscored his readiness to
engage in a proper dialogue with the Government of Israel.
It is vital that the regional crisis not be allowed to
dampen the hopes that had been emerging on this score.
President Abbas´ efforts to move the Palestinian side
towards a national unity government that addresses the
Quartet´s principles must be fully supported. Israel needs
to refrain from unilateral acts that prejudice final status
issues and agree to negotiate in the peace process.
If
the violence is to end, and dialogue and engagement resume,
the international community must also play its part, and
address the Israeli-Palestinian issue boldly and creatively.
This would also help remove a pretext used by extremists
throughout the region – including in Lebanon. As the G8
summit concluded, and as Arab leaders stressed to the
mission, the need to address a root cause of the region's
problems – the absence of a comprehensive Middle East
peace – is clear. We really need to focus on a
comprehensive Middle East peace.
Mr. President,
Our hearts and minds must be with the civilians in Lebanon, Israel and Palestine who are enduring daily violence and who are looking to the United Nations, as are many in the wider region, to find a solution to the current crisis.
I
recognize that there are differences of approach within this
Council. But today let us remember what unites us: our
compassion for the victims and for all who have lost loved
ones – to whom we must all express our deepest condolences
– and our common desire to bring about a stable, long-term
peace between Israel and its neighbours. That requires the
international community, through this Council, to speak with
one voice in the coming days.
I invite the Council to
consider the parallel implementation of the package of
concrete actions I have just presented. The support of the
international community in the political, security and
financial areas would be critical for the success of the
entire process.
It is my firm belief that only the
simultaneous implementation of the different elements of
this package will allow for the transformation of any
cessation of hostilities into a durable ceasefire. When this
is achieved, the international community will need to
develop a framework for the final delineation of the borders
of Lebanon and a decisive revival of the Middle East peace
process.
I urge the Council to take firm action
towards ensuring peace and stability in the Middle East
region as mandated by the Charter of the United
Nations.
Thank you, Mr. President.
TRANSCRIPT ENDS