Brazil, Mexico and Venezuela have all condemned Israel's attack on the
southern Lebanon village of Qana on Sunday, which killed more than 57 Lebanese
citizens, and at least half of whom were children, according to news reaching
Mexico City.
In a statement published by the Brazilian Foreign Ministry, Brazil's
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said he rejected "the acts of indiscriminate
violence and the use of military force against civilian targets by all parties"
in the conflict.
He restated Brazil's call for an immediate ceasefire in the region, and said
that he had asked Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim to support a measure
suggested by the United Nations (UN) Security Council for a ceasefire.
Lebanese officials have separately said that around 750 people have died in
the country since July 12 when Israel started a campaign of airstrikes after a
Lebanon-based guerilla group kidnapped two Israeli soldiers and killed eight.
Hezbollah has killed 50 Israelis since that date.
Lula added that Israel had ignored a request by Brazil to stop bombing the
roads used to evacuate Latin Americans.
Mexico's Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Sunday that it also
supported a call by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to end hostilities in
southern Lebanon.
"Only this will end the irreplaceable loss of civilian life and help ease the
serious humanitarian crisis, which is already affecting a large part of the
Lebanese population," it said.
The statement added Mexico had made several calls for peace and strict
compliance with international law by the region's political actors.
Mexico said it condemned the tactics used by Hezbollah such as launching
rockets at civilians in Israel, as much as those by Israel against Lebanon
described as a disproportionate use of force.
In Venezuela, Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel said on the same day that
the government joined the worldwide rejection of Israel's attack,
"This murder of dozens of women and children has no justification
whatsoever," he said in a published statement.
The UN and other powerful nations shared blame for the attack because they
had responded to Israel's military campaign in Palestine and Lebanon with
"silence and omissions."
"Venezuela has never had any anti-Jewish attitudes, recognizes the existence
of Israel as a state, welcomes the Jewish community and guarantees its total
respect," the statement said.