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About 50 French officers and soldiers arrive to join the
United Nations peacekeeping force on the border with Israel at the southern
Lebanese port of Naqura, August 19, 2006. They were the first batch of foreign
peacekeeping troops sent to Lebanon after a UN-brokered truce between Israel and
Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas took effect earlier this month. The French
government has decided to send a total of 200 troops to Lebanon.
-Xinhua/Reuters
About 50 French soldiers arrived in Lebanon on Saturday as the first
reinforcement for an enlarged UN Interim Force to Lebanon (UNIFIL) tasked with
overseeing the ceasefire in the Israel-Hezbollah conflict.
France is the first country to deploy additional troops in the region, with
200 more troops expected to arrive next week, said Bertrand Bonneau, a spokesman
for the French contingent.
An amphibious assault ship carrying 150 additional French troops and some 100
vehicles were scheduled to reach Beirut or Naqoura on Thursday to join the UN
peacekeeping force, according to Col. Christohe Issac, head of the 13th
engineering corps.
On Friday, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan urged member states to send troops
without delay to reinforce the UNIFIL. The UN wants 3,500 troops on the ground
by Aug. 28.
So far, Italy, Turkey and Finland have declared readiness to send soldiers
while asking for more details on the precise mandate of the force.
Under a UN-brokered ceasefire which took effect on Monday, 15,000 UN troops
are expected to help the same number of Lebanese troops deployed in south
Lebanon take control of the area.