Special report: Israel, Lebanon agree on
ceasefire
CAIRO, Sept. 4 (Xinhua) -- United Nations Secretary
General Kofi Annan said in the Saudi city of Jeddah on Monday that Israel and
Lebanon's Hezbollah accepted UN mediation on freeing two captive Israeli
soldiers.
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UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, seen here in the Saudi city of Jeddah, said that Israel and Lebanon's Shiite group Hezbollah have agreed to United Nations mediation on the issue of prisoners. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery >>> |
During a news conference in Jeddah, Annan, who
arrived in Saudi Arabia Monday on the latest leg of his Middle East tour, told
reporters that "the two sides have accepted the effort of the secretary-general
to help solve this problem," adding that he would appoint a mediator to work
secretly with the two sides.
It is the first time for Israel, which has insisted
on an unconditional release of the soldiers, to agree on indirect contacts with
the Lebanese Shiite group through a mediator.
On July 12, Lebanon's Shiite group Hezbollah
guerillas snatched two Israeli soldiers and killed eight others during a
cross-border attack that triggered Israel launched a massive assault against
Lebanon aimed at rescuing the captive soldiers and halting rocket attacks on
northern Israel.
However, Israel failed to gain the captive soldiers
back when the 34-day-long fighting ended on Aug. 14 under a UN-brokered
ceasefire resolution authorizing an expansion of the existing UN force in
Lebanon to 15,000 troops to help Lebanese troops take control of southern
Lebanon as Israel withdraws.
After Annan arrived in the Gulf country, he held
talks with Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah on the latest development of the Middle
East region.
The UN chief has already visited Lebanon, Israel, the
Palestinian territories, Jordan, Syria, Iran and Qatar. He is scheduled to fly
on to Egypt and Turkey later.
His Middle East tour aimed to be focused on efforts
to shore up a three-week old truce in Lebanon and find a way out of the standoff
between Iran and the international community over Tehran's nuclear programme.
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