Special report:
Israel-Lebanon
Conflicts [Video ] [Gallery]
Israel, Lebanon agree on
ceasefire
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Lebanese army soldiers with the 12th
Brigade head south, in Adloun 17 August 2006. Lebanese troops crossed the
Litani River today, heading southwards to take control of a Hezbollah
stronghold in line with a UN resolution ending a month of conflict.
(Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo Gallery
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JERUSALEM,
Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) source said on Thursday that
Israel had begun transferring some of its positions in southern Lebanon to the
UN forces with the deployment of the Lebanese army in the area, Israel's
newspaper Ha'aretz reported.
Lebanese troops, backed by tanks and armored
vehicles, began deployment early Thursday in the south of the Litani River in
line with a United Nations cease-fire plan to end fighting between Israel and
Hezbollah, local Ha'aretz said, citing a senior IDF official.
The deployment will continue for a few days "to
spread Lebanese government authority over all Lebanese territory, including
south of the Litani River," a Lebanese official was quoted as saying.
It was reported that about Lebanese 40 military
trucks and jeeps were heading to south Lebanon at around 4 a.m.(0100 GMT)on
Thursday.
The IDF confirmed early Thursday that its troops had
handed over some of their positions to the United Nations peacekeeping force
operating in the area.
"Following a joint agreement of members of the IDF,
UNIFIL (United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon) and the Lebanese army, the
process of transferring authority has begun," an IDF statement said.
"The process will be carried out in stages and is
conditional on the reinforcement of UNIFIL and the ability of the Lebanese army
to take effective control of the area," the statement said.
Under the UN cease-fire agreement, Israel was to
transfer control of its positions in southern Lebanon to the UN force, who would
then turn it over to the Lebanese army.
More than 50 percent of the areas Israel holds had
been transferred already, the IDF said. The area extends north and east of the
town of Marjayoun and another area further west.
The UN Security Council resolution authorized up to
15000 UN peacekeepers to help 15,000 Lebanese troops extend their authority
throughout south Lebanon, which Hezbollah controls, and called on IDF troops to
withdraw "in parallel."
The aim is to create a buffer zone free of Hezbollah fighters between the Litani River, some 30 km inside Lebanon, and the UN-drawn border. Enditem
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