by AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon complained to the council that "the Lebanese army has taken no action in response, allowing Hezbollah to continue building these tunnels undisturbed."
The United Nations'
envoy to the Mideast said Tuesday that peacekeepers in Lebanon have not
been given access to tunnels stretching into Israel, which U.N.
officials say violate a cease-fire resolution that ended a devastating
war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.
Nikolay Mladenov told the Security Council
that the U.N. peacekeeping mission known as UNIFIL has confirmed that
two tunnels crossed the U.N.-drawn Blue Line between Lebanon and Israel,
but "has not been granted access to the confirmed entry points of a
tunnel near Kfar Kila on the Lebanese side."
He did not say whether Lebanon's government
or the Hezbollah terrorist group was blocking access for UNIFIL, but
U.S. Deputy Ambassador Jonathan Cohen blamed the government.
Cohen accused Hezbollah, an Iranian ally,
of threatening international peace and security with the extensive
tunneling exposed by Israel, which has reported uncovering six tunnels
into its territory.
"We commend UNIFIL's work to keep the Blue
Line under control, but it is unacceptable that the Lebanese government
has not yet given UNIFIL access to the tunnel entrance on their side of
the Blue Line," Cohen told the council.
Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon
complained to the council that "the Lebanese army has taken no action in
response, allowing Hezbollah to continue building these tunnels
undisturbed."
Danon alleged that Iran funnels $7 billion
to terrorist groups across the region, including $1 billion to
Hezbollah, which he said has "grand plans to take over the Israeli
Galilee" and invests millions in every tunnel. He provided no
information on how Israel calculated its estimate of Iranian spending,
which also included $4 billion to the Syrian government, "hundreds of
millions" to Iran's proxies in Iraq, tens of millions to Houthi Shiite
rebels in Yemen, $70 million to Palestinian Islamic Jihad and $50
million to Hamas, which controls Gaza.
Mladenov noted that Lebanon has been
without a government for over eight months and called on all parties to
resolve their differences so the country "can address the main pressing
challenges it faces, including that of a struggling economy."
On the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
Mladenov said that "we should have no illusions about the dangerous
dynamics ... which continue to unfold before our eyes" and have eroded
"the possibility of establishing a viable, contiguous Palestinian
state."
Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador,
told the council that last year "Israel's illegal occupation became more
entrenched, more brutal and extreme" with the political process
"deadlocked."
"Day by day, the occupation is destroying the two-state solution and sowing deep despair among our people," he said.
But despite "the dismal situation," Mansour
said, Palestinians "remain committed to non-violence, dialogue and the
objectives of peace," as well as negotiations on a two-state solution.
He urged regional and international efforts "to help overcome the
impasse and contribute to the realization of a just solution as a matter
of urgency."
AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2019/01/23/un-peacekeepers-in-lebanon-barred-from-hezbollah-tunnels/
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