UN extends peacekeeping mission in Lebanon as China, Russia abstain
US, France strike compromise on word of text that renews UNIFIL's mandate for 1 year
By Michael Hernandez
WASHINGTON (AA) - The UN Security Council overwhelmingly voted Thursday to renew a peacekeeping mission in Lebanon for another year after a one-day delay in the vote.
The vote was initially to take place Wednesday but was pulled back to allow the French and US missions to negotiate language about peacekeepers' freedom of movement. The Council voted 13-0 to reauthorize the mission with permanent members Russia and China abstaining.
Authorization for the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) was set to expire within hours.
Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US' UN envoy who also serves as Council president for the month of August, said the agreed-upon language in the reauthorization resolution "includes language strongly reaffirming UNIFIL's freedom of movement, and its ability to conduct announced and unannounced patrols."
"It is imperative this be fully implemented and that UNIFIL not face unacceptable obstacles to carrying out its mission," she told the Council.
"We know UNIFIL has been unable to access a range of troubling sites across the blue line, including illegal firing ranges, Green Without Borders sites, rocket launch sites and tunnel sites. It is clear the main purpose of these sites is to facilitate Hezbollah's operations in southern Lebanon along the blue line," Thomas-Greenfield added.
The US on Aug. 16 sanctioned Lebanon-based Green Without Borders, which it accused of serving as a front for Hezbollah, a US-designated terror organization. The Biden administration said the organization has established outposts in more than a dozen locations along the Blue Line, which serves as the UN's demarcation line between Lebanon and Israel.
UNIFIL was established in 1978 to confirm Israel's withdrawal from southern Lebanon following an earlier invasion.
Lebanon lauded the Council's decision to extend the peacekeeping mission's mandate but said Russia and China's decision to abstain was a worrying development.
"Unfortunately, this is the first time where the extension of the UNIFIL mandate resolution is involving the abstention of two Security Council members, and this is a very, very significant indicator," Jeanne Mrad, Lebanon's UN envoy, told the Council.
China said it chose to abstain because the resolution "failed to fully address the concerns of the state concerned and Security Council members." Russia said it disputed "some of the wording in the resolution."
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