Fires on Lebanon's side of the border have flared daily since
the Iran-backed Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbollah and Israel
began exchanging fire last month after war between Israel and
Gaza's ruling Palestinian Islamist group Hamas erupted.
"Forty-thousand trees mean 40,000 histories. People are
connected to olives spiritually. Our ancestors planted them, and
we are losing them today," Agriculture Minister Abbas Hajj
Hassan told Reuters.
He accused Israel of starting the fires by using shells
containing white phosphorous to destroy wooded areas which
Hezbollah fighters - who began firing into Israel in support of
Hamas in what has become the worst flare-up of border
hostilities since a 2006 war - could use as cover.
The Israeli army denied the accusation and said the types of
smoke-screen shell it uses do not contain white phosphorus.
"The smoke-screen shells containing white phosphorus in the
(Israeli military) are not intended or used for setting fire,
and any claim that these shells are used for that cause is
baseless," an army spokesperson said.
Agriculture ministry data showed some 130 fires, in 60 villages
and their surroundings, have been recorded during the fighting.
"These olives have not been harvested yet, meaning we lost the
trees and the season," Hajj Hassan said.
"They are throwing fire," said Dory Farah, a farmer in the
border village of Alma Alashaab. "We wouldn't feel so sad if
they were two- or three year-old trees. (But) we have olives
trees that are 200 years old."
Mohammad el Husseini of the south Lebanon farmers syndicate said
the Lebanese government would not be able to compensate farmers
for the losses, with the country four years into a devastating
financial meltdown.
Lebanon's agriculture ministry asked the U.N. Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) on Tuesday for assistance to help
affected farmers and in examining the soil to determine the
extent of the damage, Hajj Hassan added.
Olive output covers more than 20% of farmland in Lebanon and
provides income for more than 110,000 farmers and growers,
accounting for 7% of agricultural GDP, according to U.N. data.
(Reporting by Riham Alkousaa in Beirut, Emily Rose in Jerusalem;
editing by Mark Heinrich)
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