French ship carrying 200 peacekeepers arrives at Beirut (AP) Updated: 2006-09-09 16:01
A ship carrying 200 French troops docked Saturday at Beirut's port as the
soldiers prepared to head to south Lebanon to join the U.N. peacekeeping force
monitoring the cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas.
The amphibious ship La Foudre arrived around 8:30 a.m. (0530 GMT) and
soldiers began filing out shortly afterward, witnesses and an AP photographer
said. The ship, which sailed from the Mediterranean port of Toulon on September
4, is also carrying some 100 armored personnel carriers, trucks, weaponry and
equipment for the troops.
France, which is temporarily leading the United Nations peacekeeping mission
in Lebanon, known as UNIFIL, has already contributed 250 troops. President
Jacques Chirac said on August 24 that France would increase its contribution to
the U.N. force to 2,000 troops. Additional troops were expected to arrive in the
next few weeks. The entire UNIFIL force is expected to increase to 15,000
soldiers.
France's contribution is to include Leclerc tanks, surface-to-surface
artillery, short-range anti-aircraft missiles and radar.
The expanded force is expected to help the Lebanese army step up government
authority along the Lebanese-Israeli border. Fighting between Israel and
Lebanon-based Hezbollah guerrillas ended after 34 days on August 14 under a
U.N.-brokered cease-fire.
On Friday, a combined task force of French, Italian and Greek warships began
patrolling Lebanon's Mediterranean coast, a mission it will carry out for about
two months until a longer-term force of German vessels moves in.
French military officials said a dozen vessels could take part in the initial
operation, patrolling six miles off the coast while Lebanese military vessels
operate closer to shore.
International officials are also helping Lebanese authorities at ports, land
border crossings and Beirut's airport to ensure Hezbollah guerrillas are not
rearmed.
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