Lebanon PM urges world leaders to “end the ongoing massacres”

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PM Tammam Salam of Lebanon addresses the general debate of the General Assembly’s seventieth session. UN Photo/Cia Pak/ Sept 30, 2015
PM Tammam Salam of Lebanon addresses the general debate of the General Assembly’s seventieth session. UN Photo/Cia Pak/ Sept 30, 2015
Holding up a photograph at the podium of the General Assembly of three-year old Aylan lying face down on a Turkish beach – the Syrian boy who drowned at the beginning of the month along with his mother and brother – the Lebanese leader reiterated his country’s call to all powers in the world to “end the ongoing massacres.”

“The whole world contemplated with horror this 3-year-old body washed ashore to his eternal rest,” Prime Minister Tammam Salam told world leaders. “His tragedy sums up the prevailing fundamental human rights in our region.”

He said the picture describes the story of “tormented people, drifting in the seas to nowhere, jam packed on the sidewalks in cities and train stations, waiting for a permission, a visa or simply a meal.”

“If Europe, with its sizeable capacities and generous humanity, has been confused at the sight of thousands of displaced erupting suddenly in its cities, Lebanon, with its limited space and scarce capacities has been crawling for the past four years under the burden of one million and a half displaced Syrians, amounting to one third of its population,” the Lebanese leader added.

He explained that the problem of the displaced is only one facet of the many negative repercussions Lebanon has endured as a result of the neighboring war – terrorism being the most daunting consequence of this conflict that claimed “steep sacrifices.” “It is no secret that for more than a year now, a group of our military forces is still held by terrorist groups, and we are still exerting tremendous efforts to free them,” he underlined.

The  young  Syrian boy who drowned in a failed attempt to sail to the Greek island of Kos. Photograph: Reuters
The young Syrian boy who drowned in a failed attempt to sail to the Greek island of Kos. Photograph: Reuters
He also indicated that despite the many political crises Lebanon is enduring, chiefly the vacuum on the Presidency of the Republic, the country is proud of being a “paragon of diversity and an oasis of coexistence between members of different religions and sects, at a time of surging Middle Eastern events threatening the social, cultural and religious diversity.”

On the issue of the new agreement between Iran and the five permanent members of the Security Council [United States, France, United Kingdom, China, Russia] and Germany, Prime Minister Salam said it will “open a new page” in international relations and mark the beginning of an improvement “in the regional environments, which will reflect positively on the political situation in Lebanon.”

Meanwhile, thanking all those serving within the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), he called on the international community to compel Israel to cease its violations of Lebanese sovereignty, cooperate with UNIFIL to demarcate the rest of the Blue Line [separating Israel and Lebanon and the Litani River], and withdraw immediately from the occupied northern Ghajar area, Shebaa Farms and Kfarshuba Hills.

“Lebanon denounces Israel’s continued occupation of Palestinian land and its blockade of the Gaza Strip, and calls upon the international community to compel it to lift this inhuman blockade and secure the conditions for a decent living for the Palestinians,” Prime Minister Salam added.

He further noted that while Lebanon is rejecting the resettlement of refugees on its territory, it is stressing the right of Palestinians to return to their homeland, according to the international resolutions.

UN.Org

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One response to “Lebanon PM urges world leaders to “end the ongoing massacres””

  1. 5thDrawer Avatar
    5thDrawer

    Salam IS a good orator. And he is right in what he says, within the ‘generalities’ of a tragedy.
    A tragedy of being Lebanon.
    “He explained that the problem of the displaced is only one facet of the many negative repercussions Lebanon has endured as a result of the neighboring war – terrorism being the most daunting….”
    But it took 18 ‘battles’ in Tripoli before the Army was ‘ALLOWED’ to do it’s job there. And then, after, someone noticed Akkar … a lonely outpost on the edges of the insanity.
    “proud of being a “paragon of diversity and an oasis of coexistence between members of different religions and sects” … WHICH ALL decided they really didn’t need, in the beginning of the ‘influx from ASSad’s War’, that refugee camps should be set up – WITH UN AID – so that the Lebanese Citizens would NOT be oppressed by the WHOLE EVENT – those citizens which DO FEEL IT, but receive no ‘AID’ at all from being forced out of jobs, thanks LARGELY to the ‘new diversity’….
    “Meanwhile, thanking all those serving within the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)” …. AND we assume those who gave their lives doing that thankless task, between 2 ‘forces’, neither of which have any respect for a ‘blue line’ or the the UN ‘Peacekeepers’.
    The tragedy is, and especially with no leadership, Lebanon has become all Resistance. No change allowed.
    And Salam didn’t mention ‘food&drug quality’, at all.

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