BEIRUT, Sept. 19 (Xinhua) -- A visiting UN official
denounced on Tuesday Israel's act in of dropping large number of cluster bombs
on south Lebanon during its offensive against Hezbollah, calling it
"outrageous."
"The outrageous fact is that nearly all of these
munitions were fired in the last three to four days of the war," David Shearer,
the United Nations humanitarian coordinator in Lebanon, told a news conference
in Beirut.
"Outrageous because by that stage the conflict had
been largely resolved in the form of (the UN Security Council) Resolution 1701,"
he added.
The UN has harshly criticized Israel for using the
cluster bombs, especially in the last hours of the conflict before a ceasefire
under the UN Resolution 1701 took effect on Aug. 14. The resolution was
unanimously passed on Aug.11.
Shearer also called on Israel to coordinate in the
overall bomb clearance effort, saying Israel could greatly accelerate the
process by handing over the coordinates of where it fired the bombs.
"What we'd like is the number of shells that were
fired in, and the actual coordinates, so we can go in and short-circuit what
we're doing now and go and find those munitions straight away. But that has not
happened yet," Shearer said at the news conference.
On last Wednesday, an Israeli daily quoted an Israeli
army officer as saying that Israel dropped around 1,800 cluster bombs on Lebanon
in its 34-day assault.
Large numbers of artillery shells, bombs and cluster
bombs fired by Israeli army litter fields, houses and streets in southern
Lebanon in unexploded condition.
The unexploded cluster bombs, which were estimated by
the United Nations to be around 40 percent of those fired by the IDF in Lebanon,
remain on the ground as dangerous munitions. Shearer said cluster bombs had
killed or wounded an average of three people a day since the 34-day conflicts
ended on Aug.14.
Up to date, 15 have been killed, including a child,
and 83 wounded, of whom 23 were children, according to Shearer.
The UN demining teams have so far identified 516
cluster bomb strike locations and cleared 17,000 bomblets, according to UN
officials.
Cluster bombs are prohibited by the United Nations
for the mass casualties it caused.
However, IDF has stated that all the weapons it uses
"are legal under international law and their use conforms with international
standards."
Israeli government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said she
was unaware of any official UN complaint or further request over cluster bomb
mapping. Enditem