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UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon staying put despite Israeli warnings to move – Winnipeg Free Press

GENEVA (AP) — Forces in the United Nations peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon are maintaining their positions despite warnings from Israeli Defense Forces to move away, a spokesman for the U.N. force said Friday.

Andrea Tenenti of UNIFIL, the interim force in Lebanon, says a “unanimous” decision was taken by its 50 troop-contributing countries and the Security Council for it to hold its positions as part of its aim to monitor the conflict and work to ensure that humanitarian aid reaches needy civilians.

“The IDF has repeatedly targeted our positions, endangering the safety of our troops, in addition to Hezbollah launching rockets toward Israel from near our positions, which also puts our peacekeepers in danger,” Tenenti told a U.N. news briefing in Geneva by video.


UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon staying put despite Israeli warnings to move – Winnipeg Free Press
FILE – Capt. Hector Alonso Garcia of the Spanish UNIFIL battalion, the United Nations peacekeeping force in south Lebanon, shows on a map the blue line, a U.N.-drawn boundary between Lebanon and Israel, at an observation tower in Abbassiyeh, a Lebanese border village with Israel, on Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File)

Earlier this month, UNIFIL said an Israeli tank “directly” fired on its headquarters in the town of Naqoura, knocking down an observation tower and injuring two Indonesian peacekeepers. Germany said Thursday that a Germany navy ship deployed as part of UNIFIL off Lebanon brought down a drone of unknown origin.

Tenenti said deteriorating security in recent weeks in the fighting between Hezbollah and Israeli forces had forced UNIFIL – which has some 10,000 personnel – to suspend most, but not all, of its patrols near the “Blue Line” boundary along the Lebanon-Israel border.

“We are seeing, at the moment, hundreds of trajectories, and sometimes more, crossing the Blue Line each day, forcing our peacekeepers to spend extended hours in shelters to ensure their safety, which remains our top priority,” he said from Beirut.

UNIFIL is staying put “despite IDF demands to move from positions close to the Blue Line,” Tenenti said, adding that the peacekeepers had 29 positions “very close — up to five kilometers” (about 3 miles) from the Blue Line.

He said he was not aware of any cases in which UNIFIL troops had fired their weapons in self-defense.