Micheál Martin will be one of 70 delegates at the 'International Conference in Support of Lebanon's People and Sovereignty' in Paris (File image)

Tánaiste announces €2m in funding for Lebanon

by · RTE.ie

Tánaiste Micheál Martin is in Paris for an international meeting hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron to support Lebanon during the current assault on the country by Israel.

The meeting has been called to garner support for a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant organisation which controls significant parts of Lebanon, and to raise urgently needed humanitarian funding.

Ireland has pledged a further €2 million in aid for refugees and displaced people fleeing the conflict.

Speaking ahead of the conference, Mr Martin said: "The humanitarian situation facing the people of Lebanon is catastrophic. The international community has a responsibility to respond."

The conference also aims to support for Lebanese institutions, including the Lebanese Armed Forces.

"This meeting comes at a critical time for Lebanon," Mr Martin said.

"The scale of the death, destruction and displacement we are witnessing is completely unacceptable. The violence has to stop. We need an immediate ceasefire and de-escalation across the region."

France has historical ties with Lebanon and has been working with the United States in trying to secure a ceasefire.

However its influence has been limited since Israel launched a large-scale onslaught on Iran-backed Hezbollah in September that has seen thousands displaced and more than 2,000 people killed.

Paris hastily arranged the conference as a means to show it still has clout in its former protectorate, but few major ministers are attending.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken opted to go on a last-ditch tour of the Middle East before next month's election and will skip the Paris meeting despite being in London on Friday, instead is sending a deputy in his place.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is not attending the event (File image)

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, whose country has been reluctant to engage in Lebanon, will also not be present.

According to a framework document sent to delegations, the conference aims to reiterate the need to cease hostilities based on the 2006 UN Security Council resolution 1701, which calls for southern Lebanon to be free of any troops or weapons other than those of the Lebanese state.

It also wants to mobilise the international community to primarily help the 500,000 to 1 million displaced people. Lebanon says it needs $250 million (€230m) a month to deal with the crisis.

It will also seek to ramp up support for the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), deemed as the guarantor of internal stability, but also vital to implementing resolution 1701.

That centres around ensuring salaries are paid, food and medical supplies provided and equipment and training given with a view to the LAF increasing its numbers and eventually deploying south, officials said.

"It is important that we are able to progress and bring concrete responses," a French presidential official told reporters ahead of the conference.

Lebanon's Prime Minister Najib Mikati and key ministers involved in relief efforts will come, but neither Israel, whose Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticised the initiative, nor Iran were invited.

Questions over Franco-US co-ordination

France is also pushing Lebanese actors - despite reluctance from some - to help by moving forward on the election of a president to fill a two-year power vacuum before a ceasefire.

Quite what can be achieved on the political front is unclear, diplomats said, although France touts its direct contacts with Hezbollah and Iran as a crucial advantage compared to US mediation efforts.

Co-ordination between Paris and Washington is delicate.

The US special envoy Amos Rothstein was in Beirut on Monday saying that the US was working on a formula to end the war for good and suggested that merely committing to a previous UN resolution would not be enough.

He made no mention of Paris, although he met President Emmanuel Macron's diplomatic adviser yesterday.

"France wants a ceasefire and believes that Hezbollah will not be eliminated. It does not want to lose what it has invested in this relationship," said a Middle East diplomat. "The US wants the destruction of Hezbollah and is encouraging the Israelis to go further."

European officials have been critical that Washington is not calling for an immediate ceasefire and fear the administration will not alter that position before the election on 5 November.

"It is unclear what the French are trying to achieve with this (conference),' said a Western diplomat. "The French are furious with the US about allowing Israeli operations to continue and the US wants to keep the French at arm's length."