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Saturday, 5 August 2006, 23:32 GMT 00:32 UK

US and France agree Lebanon text

A UN peacekeeping convoy leaving its base on a patrol mission in Naqura, southern Lebanon The US and France have agreed the wording of a UN resolution to end the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah.

It calls for a "full cessation of hostilities", demanding that Hezbollah halt all attacks and Israel stop all offensive military operations.

A BBC correspondent at the UN says the wording would allow Israel some freedom if it argues it needs to defend itself.

The UN Security Council has held initial consultations on the draft. Israel has so far reacted cautiously.

US Ambassador to the UN John Bolton said the Security Council meeting on Saturday was "very productive".

"We received a lot of encouraging comments on the draft text," he said, adding that member states needed to send it back to their capitals to seek instruction.

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Full text: Draft UN resolution

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Meanwhile the violence has continued, with Israeli commandos clashing with Hezbollah fighters in southern Lebanon.

The Israeli army said eight soldiers had been wounded and several militants were killed in the raid on an apartment in Tyre suspected of housing Hezbollah fighters in the city.

Hezbollah has continued to fire rockets into northern Israel - about 170 were fired on Saturday. Three women were killed in an attack in the mainly Arab village of Arab al-Aramshe.

'Confrontation'

The draft resolution follows weeks of disagreement over the precise wording of a call to end the violence in Lebanon.

Lebanese women inspect a road in the city of Tyre, after it was hit by an Israeli missile strike

Mr Bolton said the text did not include a requirement for an immediate cessation of hostilities.

But it does call for "the immediate cessation by Hezbollah of all attacks and the immediate cessation by Israel of all offensive military actions".

The draft - sent to all 15 member states in the Security Council - also calls for the current UN force in Lebanon to monitor any cessation in fighting.

Lebanon's initial reaction was to express reservations. A Lebanese envoy to the UN, Nouhad Mahmoud, said: "We would have liked to see our concerns more reflected in the text."

He said the text lacked a call for Israeli forces in Lebanon to withdraw. "That is a recipe for more confrontation," he said.

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Israeli cabinet minister Isaac Herzog called the text an "important development".

He said military operations would continue "in the coming days, but we have to know that the timetable is becoming increasingly shorter".

Swift passage of the resolution seems likely, says the BBC's James Robbins at the UN in New York, and a formal vote could come as soon as Monday.

Foreign ministers are expected to come to New York for that vote, to give maximum weight to a call to all sides to stop fighting and work for a long-term political settlement, our correspondent adds.

UK Prime Minister Tony Blair welcomed news of the agreement, calling it "an absolutely vital first step in bringing this tragic crisis to an end".

The White House said President George W Bush was "happy with the progress being made".

Aid warning

As the violence on the ground continues, the Israeli army has warned residents in the Lebanese city of Sidon to stay away from rocket launching sites.

In other developments:

Aid agencies have warned of difficulties in delivering supplies to hundreds of thousands of people displaced by the fighting, after four bridges on the main coastal highway north from Beirut were destroyed on Friday.

"Now the main highway is bombed we have a major, major setback... it's like a de facto blockade at the moment," Astrid van Genderen Stort, spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency told the BBC.



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