UN / LACROIX LEBANON PEACEKEEPING
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STORY: UN / LACROIX LEBANON PEACEKEEPING
TRT: 03:35
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 19 NOVEMBER 2024, NEW YORK CITY / FILE
FILE - NEW YORK CITY
1. Wide shot, exterior UN Headquarters
19 NOVEMBER 2024, NEW YORK CITY
2. Wide shot, press room dais
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, United Nations:
“This morning, a patrol moving south from UN position 91 to UN position 641 encountered a roadblock in the village of Kherbet Selem. While bypassing the obstacle, the patrol came under small arms fire from an unknown individual. The patrol managed to continue along the scheduled route without sustaining any casualties. In a second separate incident, four peacekeepers sustained minor injuries when an artillery shell exploded with the UN position 542 near Ramyeh. The mission made a stop fire request and is asserting the projectile trajectory. The injured personnel were subsequently transferred to UN P566 for medical treatment. In a third incident, UNIFIL Sector West headquarters in Shama was impacted by five rockets, which struck the maintenance workshop, although it caused heavy damage to the workshop, no peacekeepers were injured.”
4. Med shot, journalists
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, United Nations:
“We all hope that the diplomatic efforts that are currently ongoing would lead to a positive outcome. I think you're aware of the recent development and the back and forth with the US envoy Amos Hochstein, the involvement of various member states, the United States, France and their commitment to push those diplomatic efforts.”
6. Med shot, journalists
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, United Nations:
“We proceed under the assumption that Resolution 1701 will remain the political framework for a settlement. I believe that there has been no questioning from any of the parties of that resolution. But then in addition to keeping Resolution 1701 as a political framework, any meaningful role for UNIFIL will have to depend on, again, the existence of a strong commitment, political will to implement Resolution 1701, and that would, I believe, include a very serious commitment to UNIFIL’s freedom of movement.”
8. Med shot, journalists
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, United Nations:
“You know, like I say, in some cases it's clearly intentional because we have the elements. We even have some videos that suggest, you know, more than suggests the intentionality. In other cases, it's hard to tell. Probably many of them are not intentional. And I would also, I have another category which I call semi-intentional. If military activities are carried out in the vicinity of a UN position, then that is putting UN peacekeepers in danger. That is putting them at risk.”
10. Wide shot, press room dais
11. Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, United Nations:
“Argentina has withdrawn, I believe, four officers from UNIFIL’s observer group in Lebanon. It's the prerogative of any member states to make that decision. So, we take note of this. I would add that Argentina is and continues to be a valued troop contributing country. There are Argentinean peacekeepers in other operations, particularly in Cyprus, where they have a company on sector west of Cyprus. And also, they are, Argentina's providing the helicopter unit in Cyprus, which also is very useful.”
12. Wide shot, end of presser
Peacekeeping Chief Jean-Pierre Lacroix today (19 Nov) provided details to journalists in New York of three separate incident in the past 24 hours where UN peacekeepers in Lebanon came under fire.
Lacroix said, “a patrol moving south from UN position 91 to UN position 641 encountered a roadblock in the village of Kherbet Selem. While bypassing the obstacle, the patrol came under small arms fire from an unknown individual” without sustaining any casualties.
In a second separate incident, he continued, “four peacekeepers sustained minor injuries when an artillery shell exploded with the UN position 542 near Ramyeh.”
In a third incident, Lacroix said, “UNIFIL Sector West headquarters in Shama was impacted by five rockets, which struck the maintenance workshop, although it caused heavy damage to the workshop, no peacekeepers were injured.”
The Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations expressed hope that diplomatic efforts by various member states, including the United States and France “would lead to a positive outcome.”
Lacroix said, “we proceed under the assumption that Resolution 1701 will remain the political framework for a settlement. I believe that there has been no questioning from any of the parties of that resolution. But then in addition to keeping Resolution 1701 as a political framework, any meaningful role for UNIFIL will have to depend on, again, the existence of a strong commitment, political will to implement Resolution 1701, and that would, I believe, include a very serious commitment to UNIFIL’s freedom of movement.”
Asked about intentionality behind the attacks on peacekeepers, he said, “in some cases it's clearly intentional because we have the elements. We even have some videos that suggest, you know, more than suggests the intentionality.”
In other cases, Lacroix continued, “it's hard to tell,” but noted that “if military activities are carried out in the vicinity of a UN position, then that is putting UN peacekeepers in danger. That is putting them at risk.”
Asked about reports of Argentina’s peacekeepers withdrawal from UNIFIL, he said, “four officers from UNIFIL’s observer group in Lebanon” had been withdrawn and added that “it's the prerogative of any member states to make that decision.”
Lacroix and the Special Coordinator for Lebanon, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert are expected to brief the Security Council this afternoon in closed consultations on the 1701 report