Special report: Israel-Lebanon Conflicts [Video ] [Gallery]
CAIRO, Aug. 13 (Xinhua) -- Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak has said that newly-passed UN Security Council Resolution 1701 on
Lebanon was "a step in the right direction," the official MENA news agency
reported Sunday.
In an interview with the Egyptian daily al-Messa, Mubarak said,"We welcome the international resolution for
being the first step in the right direction. And, to put it simply, we just
accept what the Lebanese government accepts."
Mubarak said that Egypt supported any international
overture to stop bloodshedding in Lebanon and end sufferings of the Lebanese
people and destruction of Lebanon's infrastructure.
Mubarak, however, said that the resolution still lacked a
required balance in many of its parts despite all the amendments.He criticized
the resolution for failing to call for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire.
The resolution disregarded parts of a seven-point
plan floated by Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Seniora on July 26, Mubarak
said,adding that the resolution also overlooked some of amendments that the
Lebanese government had asked the Security Council to endorse.
The veteran president slammed the Security Council for its
slowness in moving to contain the crisis and end Israel's aggression on Lebanon.
Mubarak said that the issuance of Resolution 1701 was
not the end of the line while calling on all parties concerned to implement it.
Mubarak also warned that more crises similar to the
present one would occur in the future unless a just and overall peace shouldbe
restored to all parts of the Middle East -- Lebanon, Syria and the occupied
Palestinian lands.
On Friday, the UN Security Council unanimously
adopted Resolution 1701, calling for Israeli troops withdrawal and authorizing
an increase of the existing UN force in Lebanon to 15,000 troops to help
Lebanese troops take control of south Lebanonas Israel withdraws.
France and the United States, co-sponsors of the
draft resolution, came up with a compromise final version after days of hard
wrangling. And the resolution has left out some key demands from both Israel and
Lebanon in efforts to produce a workable arrangement.
The conflict between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah
guerillas erupted on July 12 when Hezbollah guerillas kidnapped two Israeli
soldiers and killed eight others during a cross-border raid.Enditem