Israel approves UN ceasefire deal
13 August 2006
Aljazeera
The Israeli cabinet has approved a UN resolution calling for a halt to the month-old war in southern Lebanon.
The prime ministers of both Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a cessation of hostilities beginning at 0500 GMT on Monday.
Tzipi Livni, the Israeli foreign minister, said the Israeli army "will withdraw as the Lebanon army and the international force deploys".
The UN security council resolution envisages a phased withdrawal of Israeli troops from south Lebanon and the deployment of 15,000 Lebanese troops to the region alongside a further 15,000 UN peacekeeping troops.
Israel officials say they will still be entitled to use force to prevent Hezbollah from rearming even after the UN truce takes effect.
Livni said the ceasefire should also lead to the dismantling of Hezbollah.
The Lebanese government, however, which contains two Hezbollah cabinet members, has postponed a meeting to discuss the disarmament of the group's fighters.
Syria, which is widely seen as being supportive of Hezbollah, also said it supported the Lebanese government's endorsement of the UN resolution, the Syrian Sana news agency reported.
Fighting continues
Israeli warplanes launched a series of strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs on Sunday, destroying 11 residential buildings and killing at least two people, witnesses and security sources said.
In total, 17 civilians and four soldiers were killed in Lebanon on Sunday, police said, as Israel continued its bombardment of the country.
Hezbollah launched more than 250 rockets at Israeli towns in the north - the largest total number in a single day.
Less than 24 hours before the ceasefire was to due to take effect, Israeli troops fought ferocious battles with Hezbollah fighters across several areas of southern Lebanon.
In Tyre, Israeli warplanes bombed five petrol stations, sparking a huge fire that threatened to engulf a nearby hospital.
Israeli casualties
Israeli's ground assault involves as many as 30,000 troops dropped into southern Lebanon in what military officials say is Israel's largest-ever air operation.
The Israeli army said that five of its soldiers had been killed in fighting in southern Lebanon on Sunday.
At least 24 Israeli soldiers were killed in combat Saturday, the highest single-day toll since the conflict began on July 12.
Mounting Israeli casualties have led some Israeli's to become critical of their government's handling of the war.
Shimon Peres, the Israeli deputy prime minister, said, "I think that we have finished more or less the victors both militarily and politically".
He told told Israeli army radio that Hezbollah would end with "its tail between its legs".
Eli Yishai, the Israeli trade minister, also issued a stark warning to Lebanon even if the ceasefire comes into force, saying, "If a single stone is thrown at Israel from whatever village that happens, it should be turned into a pile of stones."
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said on Saturday, "As long as there is Israeli military movement, Israeli field aggression and Israeli soldiers occupying our land ... it is our natural right to confront them, fight them and defend our land, our homes, and ourselves."
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