http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=17705
Former leaders call for settlement in Arab-Israeli conflict Middle East Online 2006-10-04, Call to end Israeli occupation, end boycott of Palestinian Authority, and recognise Israel. LONDON - More than 100 former world leaders, foreign ministers, diplomats, and religious leaders have put their names to an open letter published in The Financial Times on Wednesday calling for progress towards a settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Organised by the International Crisis Group and signed by former world leaders such as US president Jimmy Carter, British prime minister John Major and president of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev, the letter calls for "urgent international action". "Everyone has lost in this conflict except the extremists throughout the world who prosper on the rage that it continues to provoke. Every passing day undermines prospects for a peaceful, enduring solution," the letter, with a total of 135 signatories, reads. "As long as the conflict lasts, it will generate instability and violence in the region and beyond." Former UN secretary-general Boutros Boutros-Ghali, the Dalai Lama and the Reverend Desmond Tutu also signed the letter, which includes eight Nobel Peace Prize winners (including Carter, Gorbachev and Tutu). "The goal must be security and full recognition to the state of Israel within international recognized borders, an end to the occupation for the Palestinian people in a viable independent, sovereign state, and the return of lost land to Syria," the letter reads. It calls for a "new international conference, ideally held as soon as possible and attended by all relevant players, at which all the elements of a comprehensive peace agreement would be mapped, and momentum gathered for detailed negotiations." The letter also calls for an end to the financial boycott of the Palestinian Authority, talks between Israel and the Palestinian leadership, and parallel talks between Israel, Syria and Lebanon. Other notable signatories to the letter include: former German foreign minister and current EU foreign policy chief Joschka Fischer; former NATO supreme allied commander Wesley Clark; former Indian prime minister I K Gujral; former South Korean president Kim Dae-jung; former US secretary of defense Robert McNamara; former British foreign secretary Malcolm Rifkind; and Shlomo Ben-Ami, the former Israeli foreign minister. *** Agence France Presse October 3, 2006 West Bank settlements grew during Lebanon war by Jean-Luc Renaudie With media attention focused on the Lebanon war, Israeli wildcat settlement outposts in the occupied West Bank have mushroomed in recent months, a watchdog group has said. Some 31 outposts sprang up in the West Bank as work on developing infrastructure, access routes as well as the installation of new mobile homes has steamed ahead in violation of the internationally backed roadmap for peace, the anti-settlement Peace Now watchdog said Tuesday. "In the past months, the government of Israel has continued to evade its responsibility to evacuate the unauthorized outposts in the West Bank," a report said. "It appears that the summer of 2006, marked by the fighting in south Lebanon, provided a golden opportunity for the settlers to deepen their hold on the land without the media being available to cover it," it said. In 12 illegal outposts, the construction of permanent homes has likewise continued without hindrance from the authorities, it said. "The extremist settlers took advantage that attention was concentrated on the Lebanon war to entrench themselves," Dror Etkes, the author of the report, told AFP. "The situation in Lebanon has likewise furnished the government with an alibi that it didn't need to proceed with the evacuation of wildcat outposts and to proceed with the development of other settlements," he said. The report was slammed as "lies" by the main settler organization, the Settlers Council in Judea and Samaria, the biblical name by which the West Bank is called in Israel. "This report is full of lies," Emily Amrussi, a spokeswoman for the group, told AFP. The report, which was published a day before US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is due in Israel, was aimed "at creating a diplomatic crisis out of nothing." Washington, Israel's main ally, has repeatedly called on the Jewish state to dismantle illegal outposts in the West Bank. Amrussi also vehemently denied that settlers took advantage of the war in Lebanon, saying "it is mostly the settlement cemeteries that increased (during the offensive) with the death of 11 (settler) soldiers" out of a total 121 troops killed. Separately, the nation's second-largest daily Maariv reported that, contrary to declared government policy, the army plans to guard all illegal outposts in 2007. During the first nine months of 2006, the government has invited bids for construction of 952 new units in illegal settlements, compared with 235 such bids solicited in the year-earlier period. According to official data, there are 105 wildcat outposts in the occupied West Bank. Under the terms of the roadmap, Israel was meant to freeze all settlement construction in the West Bank. The plan, however, has made no progress since its launch three years ago, and Israel says it will not be bound by its commitments until the Palestinians put a halt to attacks. The number of Israelis living in the occupied West Bank, excluding annexed east Jerusalem, has increased by 2.7 percent to 260,042 during the past six months, according to statistics published by the interior ministry last month. Israel dismantled all 21 settlements built in the Gaza Strip and withdrew all its troops and settlers from the territory in 2005. In late June, however, troops were initially returned to the territory at the start of a prolonged offensive to stop militants firing rockets and recover a captured soldier. Israel also continues to hinder traffic in and out of Gaza. *** http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/06/world/middleeast/06cluster.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&th&emc=th Israel Bomblets Plague Lebanon By MICHAEL SLACKMAN NY Times: October 6, 2006 BEIRUT, Lebanon, Sept. 29 - Since the war between Israel and Hezbollah ended in August, nearly three people have been wounded or killed each day by cluster bombs Israel dropped in the waning days of the war, and officials now say it will take more than a year to clear the region of them. United Nations officials estimate that southern Lebanon is littered with one million unexploded bomblets, far outnumbering the 650,000 people living in the region. They are stuck in the branches of olive trees and the broad leaves of banana trees. They are on rooftops, mixed in with rubble and littered across fields, farms, driveways, roads and outside schools. As of Sept. 28, officials here said cluster bombs had severely wounded 109 people - and killed 18 others. Muhammad Hassan Sultan, a slender brown-haired 12-year-old, became a postwar casualty when the shrapnel from a cluster bomb cut into his head and neck. He was from Sawane, a hillside village with a panoramic view of terraced olive farms and rolling hills. Muhammad was sitting on a hip-high wall, watching a bulldozer clear rubble, when the machine bumped into a tree. A flash of a second later he was fatally injured when a cluster bomblet dropped from the branches. "I took Muhammad to the hospital in my car, but he was already dead," said Yousef Ftouni, a resident of the village. The entire village was littered with the bomblets, and as Mr. Ftouni recounted Muhammad's death, the Lebanese Army worked its way through an olive grove, blowing up unexploded munitions in a painfully slow process of clearance. Cluster bombs are legal if aimed at military targets and are very effective, military experts say. Nonetheless, Israel has been heavily criticized by United Nations officials, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch for using cluster bombs, because they are difficult to focus exclusively on military targets. Israel was also criticized because it fired most of its cluster bombs in the last days of the war, when the United Nations Security Council was negotiating a resolution to end the conflict. Officials calculate that if they are lucky, and money from international donors does not run out, it will take 15 months to clear the area. There are now about 300 Lebanese Army soldiers and 30 other clearance teams, each of up to 30 experts, working on the problem of unexploded bomblets. The United Nations Mine Action Coordination Center in southern Lebanon recorded 745 locations across the south where unexploded bombs had been found. Of the million estimated to be scattered around, so far 4,500 have been disposed of, according to the center. "Our priority at the moment is to clean houses, main roads and gardens so that the displaced people can return to their villages," said Col. Mohammad Fahmy, head of the national mine clearing office. "The next stage will be cleaning agricultural lands." In Lebanon there are two explanations of why Israel unleashed cluster bombs at the end of the war: to inflict as much damage as possible on Hezbollah before withdrawing, or to litter the south with unexploded cluster bombs as a strategy to keep people from returning right away. The United States has sold cluster bombs to Israel in the past and says it is investigating whether Israel's use of cluster bombs in its war with Hezbollah violated a secret agreement that restricted when they could be used. The final days of the war - a conflict that began when Hezbollah launched rockets from Lebanon into northern Israel and sent militiamen across the border to capture Israeli soldiers - were marked by a huge Israeli offensive. Israel hoped its final push would, in part, help force the Security Council to adopt a tougher resolution on Hezbollah than appeared to be taking shape. Israel has said it leafleted areas before bombing and provided Lebanon with maps of potential cluster bomb locations to help with the clearing process. United Nations officials in Lebanon say the maps are useless. The Israeli newspaper Haaretz published an article on Sept. 12 anonymously quoting the head of a rocket unit in Lebanon who was critical of the decision to use cluster bombs. "What we did was insane and monstrous; we covered entire towns in cluster bombs," Haaretz quoted the commander as saying. Repeated efforts to get Israeli officials to explain the rationale behind the use of the bombs have proved fruitless, with spokesmen referring all queries to short official statements arguing that everything done conformed with international law. In Lebanon the problem of the unexploded munitions is magnified by the desire to return to villages and lives in a region that is effectively booby-trapped. People want to begin rebuilding and harvest their crops. In some cases they have tried to clear the bomblets themselves, and some people have begun charging a small fee to clear away bombs - a practice that officials have discouraged as dangerous. But the people are desperate. "If I lost the season for olives and the wheat, I have no money for the winter,"' said Rida Noureddine, 54, who farms a small patch of land on the main road in the village of Kherbet Salem. There was a small black object at the entrance to his farm, and he thought it was a cluster bomb. "I feel as if someone has tied my arms, or is holding me by my neck, suffocating me because this land is my soul," he said. The bomblets, about the size of a D battery, can be packed into bombs, missiles or artillery shells. When the delivery system detonates, the bomblets spread like buckshot across a large area, making them difficult to aim with precision. A fact sheet issued by the Mine Action Coordination Center says cluster bombs have an official failure rate of 15 percent. That means that 15 percent of the bomblets remain as hazards. According to the fact sheet, the failure rate in this war is estimated to be around 40 percent. "We estimate there are one million," said Dalya Farran, the community liaison officer of the mine action center. Ms. Farran has worked at the center for nearly three years. It was set up in 2000 to help deal with the mines and unexploded ordnance left behind after the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon and from other wars. After this war, Ms. Farran said, there are two types of cluster bomb fragments across the south. The most commonly found type is known as M42, a deceptively small device resembling a light socket. She said a large percentage of the unexploded bomblets were made in America, while some were produced in Israel. Each one has a white tail dangling off the back, like the tail of a kite. As they fall to the ground, the tail spins and unscrews the firing pin. When the device hits, the front end fires a huge slug while the casing blasts apart into a spray of deadly metal fragments. When they fail to detonate they cling to the ground, and with their white tails look deceptively like toys, so children are often those who are injured. "This is what they are living with every day," said Simon Lovell, a supervisor with one of the clearance teams as he looked at five unexploded bomblets poking out of the soft, rocky soil of the Hussein family farm. Across the street, Hussein Muhammad, 48, at home with his wife and four children, waited for the clearance team. His olive trees were heavy with fruit, but he could not tend to the harvest. "I feel that the land has become my enemy," he said. "It represents a danger to my life and my kids' lives." Nada Bakri contributed reporting from Lebanon. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Digest: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Help: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Post: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn> --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Yahoo! 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