His candidacy could prompt legal challenges over whether a man deemed unfit as defence minister

His candidacy could prompt legal challenges over whether a man deemed unfit as defence minister was fit to be premier, the paper reported.But if the Knesset approves legislation to dissolve itself, there would be a general election for Prime Minister that would be open to all. The first of three readings needed for its dissolution was passed last month.* The US-led commission of inquiry into the violence between Israelis and Palestinians will make its first visit to the region today. The five-member committee is expected to meet Mr Barak and Mr Arafat separately.. Mohamed Sowaid is nine and has multiple shrapnel wounds His brother Ali – equally mutilated – is only five.

Issam Missilmani is a 33-year-old fisherman who had his right foot and left hand blown off

Mohamed Sowaid is nine and has multiple shrapnel wounds His brother Ali – equally mutilated – is only five. Issam Missilmani is a 33-year-old fisherman who had his right foot and left hand blown off.
Alaa Hussein is 17 and Mohamed Hijazi is 22; both were blown up, Mohamed losing his left foot. And they are just the mine casualties of southern Lebanon in one day this month.In all, 11 civilians havebeen killed and at least 56 seriously wounded in the fields around their homes since the Israeli army retreated out of Lebanon in May, leaving behind 70,000 mines.The figure is official. The four volumes of documents and minefield maps, which the withdrawing Israeli army handed to the United Nations after they ended their 22-year occupation of 10 per cent of Lebanon seven months ago – an act of co-operation for which the UN is duly grateful – are a history of warfare, of No 4 Israeli antipersonnel mines and No 10 plastic mines, of booby-traps and minefields atop minefields.In all, the UN believes there are 130,000 mines and booby-traps and unexploded bombs scattered across the harsh, brown hills of southern Lebanon, some of them dating back to the French mandate and the Vichy French-Allied battles of the Second World War.Fresh from 10 months in Kosovo, Don Macdonald, 46, from Forres in Grampian – after 22 years as an RAF bomb disposal officer – sits in his office at Naqqoura on the Lebanese-Israeli border with computer banks that show him the location of the tiniest bits of ordnance in the wadis and thickets of this dangerous countryside The Israelis handed over a list of 288 booby-traps. At Kfar Roumane was “a [booby] trapped vest [flak jacket] and side charge”, near Yohmor was “a trapped LAW [Light AntiArmour Weapon]“.

Both were left during the occupation for Hizbollah guerrillas to pick up.Intriguingly, their location proves that the Israelis sent patrols right through the UN peace-keeping lines to leave these booby-traps close to the Litani river.”We haven’t got any records from the other side,” Mr Macdonald says of the Hizbollah, who used bombs disguised as rocks and old shells to ambush the Israeli occupiers “I don’t think they kept any records.”Perhaps. My own suspicion is that the Hizbollah has no intention of revealing its booby-traps – in case the Israelis come back. So far, the UN’s Ukrainian battalion has destroyed 2,135 mines to clear land used by UN troops. The Lebanese government has to de-mine most of southern Lebanon; and, so far, the authorities have scarcely started to fence off the minefields.

One of the little boys so badly wounded had seen a television programme about mines and tragically decided to try his own hand at clearance.There are Russian PMD-6 mines – left by the Israelis or the Palestinians – and French mines from 1947, left along the coast in the very last days of the mandate. In some places, Israeli minefields are planted on top of Second World War minefields, layers of Lebanon’s terrifying history waiting to explode and re-explode under future generations. A three-man UN mine action coordination cell operates with the UN Interim Force in Lebanon, its New Zealand boss, Greg Lindstrom, paying tribute to the detail of the maps the Israelis handed over, which included suspected minefields left by earlier occupiers.”There’s a peace dividend to all this,” he says. “Clearing minefields means that people can come back to their lands I saw this in Mozambique.

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