Comment: this "dispute' was resolved by this very same UN several years ago. Curious why this is brought up now ahead of the November conference.
Israel has rejected a recommendation by a United Nations ambassador to begin negotiations with Lebanon over the disputed Shebaa Farms area, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on Friday "According to the envoy, Geir Pedersen, the UN is becoming increasingly convinced that the Shebaa Farms belong to Lebanon," the daily said During a meeting recently with Amos Gilad, the head of the Political-Military Bureau at the Defense Ministry, Pedersen, who is the UN Secretary General's personal representative in Lebanon, said that "the UN believes there is merit in the Lebanese claims of sovereignty over Shebaa Farms."
According to Haaretz, Pedersen stressed that it would be beneficial if Israel initiated negotiations over this issue.
During the coming weeks the UN Security Council is expected to receive another report on the implementation of Resolution 1701, which put an end to the summer 2006 war.
"Pedersen authored the first report, which made no mention of the Shebaa Farms following intense Israeli pressure," the daily said.
However, the several-months hiatus this pressure bought Israel may be coming to an end following a series of meetings Pedersen held in Israel recently with senior officials at the Foreign and Defense ministries and with the Israeli Army.
The Shebaa Farms, situated in a sensitive spot where the borders of Syria, Israel and Lebanon meet, has long been a point of contention but assumed added significance after Israel withdrew from Southern Lebanon, because both Syria and Lebanon insist it is Lebanese territory still under Israeli occupation.
The farms are part of what was the French Mandate over the territory that today is Syria and Lebanon. The border was established in a 1923 agreement between Britain and France and was not precisely marked on the ground.
Following Israel's withdrawal from Southern Lebanon, Lebanese argued that Shebaa Farms is part of their sovereign territory. However, after Israel pulled out of Lebanon in May 2000, the UN maintained that the territory was part of Syria's Golan Heights and its future would be decided in negotiations between Damascus and Jerusalem.
http://www.dailystar.com.lb
After last year's war the efforts to mark the border between Syria and Lebanon began. Since then, Israel's stance was that it would not discuss the sovereignty of the farms until a decision was made whether the area was Lebanese or Syrian.
In recent months, both Lebanon and Syria proposed that the disputed land temporarily be placed under UN control, until the demarcation of the border is completed. Israel refused.
Haaretz reported that during his meeting with Gilad, the Pedersen noted that the evidence boosts the Lebanese claims. Pedersen said it may be advisable for Israel to agree to separate negotiations with the government of Lebanon on the Shebaa Farms to resolve the issue.
Gilad turned down the proposal, saying: "We will not agree to resolving this issue separately. Every agreement with Lebanon will be part of a single package."
In recent months, UN cartographer Miklos Pinter has been working on determining the size of the Shebaa Farms. His report has still not been completed.
The daily added that the upcoming report on Resolution 1701, might include some of the findings of Pinter's report will be included.
In a report to UN headquarters, Pedersen wrote that Israeli officials, including Gilad, were critical of Pinter's work, claiming "there are technical mistakes in the UN work on the Shebaa Farms issue."
"Nonetheless," Haaretz added, "in Israel officials are confident Pedersen's upcoming report to the Security Council will not require Israel to carry out significant steps in the matter.
"From our point of view this issue is off the agenda for good," senior political sources told the newspaper. "There is no point in talking about this any more. We have no room to show flexibility on this matter because that only strengthens Hizbullah and does not serve [Premier Fouad] Siniora." - The Daily Star
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