France and other nations pledge massive aid package to support Lebanon
at international conference
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[October 24, 2024]
By SYLVIE CORBET
PARIS (AP) — France pledged to provide a 100-million euro ($108-million)
package to support Lebanon at an international conference Thursday, as
President Emmanuel Macron said “massive aid” is needed to support the
country where war between Hezbollah militants and Israel has displaced a
million people, killed over 2,500, and deepened an economic crisis.
French organizers hope the Paris conference, which gathered over 70
nations and international organizations, will raise enough money to
provide the $426 million in humanitarian aid the United Nations says is
urgently needed.
“In the immediate term, massive aid is needed for the Lebanese
population, both for the hundreds of thousands of people displaced by
the war and for the communities hosting them,” Macron said in his
opening speech at the conference.
Germany pledged a total of 96 million euros in humanitarian aid to both
Lebanon and neighboring Syria, also deeply affected by escalating
violence in the Middle East. Italy this week announced an additional 10
million euros ($10.8 million) in aid for Lebanon.
But experts warn that delivering aid could be challenging as Lebanon’s
growing dependence on the informal and cash economy increases lack of
transparency and corruption risks.
The Paris conference also aims at coordinating international support to
strengthen Lebanon’s armed forces so they can deploy in the country’s
south as part of a potential deal to end the war. Such a deal could see
Hezbollah withdraw its forces from the border.
This support to the Lebanese military includes “helping with health
care, fuel, small equipment, but also supporting the plan to recruit at
least 6,000 additional soldiers and to enable the deployment of at least
8,000 additional soldiers in the south,” Macron said.
In Lebanon, an Israeli airstrike killed three Lebanese soldiers,
including an officer, as they were evacuating wounded people in southern
Lebanon. The army said Israeli forces have targeted it on eight
occasions since all-out war broke out between Israel and Hezbollah in
September.
The Israeli army apologized for a strike on Sunday that it said
mistakenly killed three soldiers, and on Wednesday said it was looking
into whether “a number of soldiers of the Lebanese army were
accidentally harmed” after it targeted what it says was Hezbollah
infrastructure.
Paris also seeks to help restore Lebanon's sovereignty and strengthen
its institutions. The country, where Hezbollah effectively operates as a
state within a state, has been without a president for two years while
political factions fail to agree on a new one.
U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, in a pre-recorded video, called
on Lebanon’s leaders “to take decisive action to ensure the proper
functioning of state institutions in order to meet the country’s urgent
political and security challenges.”
Acting Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati urged the international
community to take action.
“The devastating impact of this war on our nation cannot be overstated,
and it has left a trail of destruction and misery in its wake. The
Israeli’s aggression has not only caused immense human suffering and
loss of lives, but also inflicted severe damage to the country’s
infrastructure, economy and social fabric," Mikati said Thursday in
Paris.
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France's President Emmanuel Macron hugs Lebanon's Prime Minister
caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati, left, during international
conference for Lebanon in Paris, Thursday, Oct.24, 2024. (Alain
Jocard, Pool via AP)
Israel in the past month has launched a major aerial bombardment and
ground invasion of Lebanon as it targets Hezbollah, with strikes
hitting the capital, Beirut, and elsewhere.
The International Organization for Migration has said about 800,000
people are displaced, with many now in overcrowded shelters, while
others have fled across the border into Syria. Mikati on Thursday
estimated the number of displaced people is over 1.4 million,
including 500,000 children.
The cash-strapped Lebanese government is ill-prepared to deal with
the crisis or the increased demands on its health system. A number
of hospitals have been evacuated because of nearby airstrikes and
fears that they might be targeted.
Lebanon's army has been hit hard by five years of economic crisis.
It has an aging arsenal and no air defenses, leaving it in no
position to defend against Israeli incursions or confront Hezbollah.
The Lebanese army has about 80,000 troops, around 5,000 of them
deployed in the south. Hezbollah has more than 100,000 fighters,
according to the militant group’s late leader, Hassan Nasrallah. The
militant group's arsenal, built with support from Iran, is more
advanced.
Conference participants also are to discuss how to support the
10,500-soldier-strong U.N. peacekeeping mission, UNIFIL. European
nations including France, Italy and Spain provide a third of its
troops.
Italy, which has over 1,000 troops in UNIFIL, is pushing for the
peacekeeping force to be strengthened to “be able to face the new
situation” on the ground, an Italian diplomat said, speaking
anonymously to discuss ongoing talks.
Guterres said Thursday that “attacks on U.N. peacekeepers are
totally unacceptable and are contrary to international law, contrary
to international humanitarian law and may constitute a war crime.”
France’s historic links with Lebanon, a former colony, and its
influential diplomacy give Paris momentum to coordinate “a proper
response to the massive challenge that the war in Lebanon now
poses,” said Middle East expert Rym Montaz, editor in chief of
Carnegie Europe’s blog Strategic Europe.
“What we do know is that without a strengthened Lebanese armed
forces and UNIFIL, there can be no sustainable peace and stability
at the border between Lebanon and Israel,” Montaz said. “As such,
the French efforts are important and crucial for the way forward.”
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AP writers Geir Moulson in Berlin, Germany and Abby Sewell in
Beirut, Lebanon, contributed.
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