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TERROR WARS
UN urged to take stand against Iraq IS 'atrocities'
by Staff Writers
United Nations, United States (AFP) July 23, 2014


Lebanese soldier deserts and joins jihadists: video
Beirut (AFP) July 23, 2014 - A Lebanese soldier who deserted was shown in a video distributed online on Wednesday seated beneath a flag of the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Al-Nusra Front and announcing he has defected.

A military official told AFP that a military conscript he named as Atef Saadeddine had deserted.

He said that although this was not the first desertion, it was the first in which the deserter has said he has joined Al-Nusra Front, which is battling Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces.

In the video, Saadeddine said he was deserting because of army "bias" towards Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah organisation, which has sent thousands of fighters into Syria to support Assad's troops.

The video shows Saadeddine in military gear. He identifies himself as "a soldier defecting from the Eighth Division" deployed in the Labweh-Arsal region, a short drive away from the restive Syrian Qalamun area.

Saadeddine displays his military ID, which shows he was born in 1991 in Akkar, a majority Sunni area in Lebanon.

The country is sharply divided over the conflict in neighbouring Syria. Most Lebanese Sunnis back the revolt, while Hezbollah and its allies support Assad.

"I defected because, like every soldier in the Lebanese army, regardless of whether he is Sunni or not, I know that the army is a tool of the party (Hezbollah)," Saadeddine says in the video.

He says the army "takes orders from Hezbollah, sets up checkpoints wherever Hezbollah wants, and all of the officers are under Hezbollah's orders".

At the end of the video, several masked men embrace Saadeddine and kiss him on the brow. He smiles.

Twitter accounts allegedly linked to Al-Nusra fighters also reported Saadeddine's defection.

The military official said Saadeddine's desertion and decision to join "a terrorist organisation" will be referred to the military tribunal.

A security source in the eastern Bekaa valley told AFP on condition of anonymity that Saadeddine deserted on Tuesday night.

The source said gunmen who crossed from Syria "looted Lebanese army weapons" and that Saadeddine fled with them back across the border.

Accusing the Islamic State in Iraq of murder, hostage-takings and kidnappings, the UN envoy in Iraq on Wednesday called on the Security Council to firmly demand an end to atrocities.

Nickolay Mladenov told the 15-member Council that it was time to take a stand to end to the violence, enforce sanctions to isolate the Islamic State, formerly known as ISIL, and bring perpetrators of war crimes to justice.

"Recruiting and using foreign fighters, engaging in murder, hostage-taking, kidnappings, gross human rights violations, all of which are reasons why the international community and the Security Council should demand, in no uncertain terms, that ISIL cease all hostilities and atrocities," he said.

The top world body must "call upon member states to cooperate in efforts to enforce existing sanctions and hold accountable the perpetrators, organizers and sponsors of these horrific terrorist acts, war crimes and crimes against humanity," said Mladenov by videoconference from Baghdad.

The UN Security Council has denounced the persecution of Christians and urged Iraqi politicians to come together to fight the al-Qaeda offshoot that now controls one third of Iraq including Mosul, the country's second city.

ISIL is on the UN list of terror groups as an al-Qaeda affiliate and is the target of international sanctions.

"The threat of ISIL is not and will not be limited to Iraq. Therefore serious engagement among various stakeholders is urgently needed," said Mladenov, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's special envoy for Iraq.

ISIL fighters launched their advance in Iraq on June 9 and a few weeks later declared a "caliphate" extending from northern Syria to eastern Iraq.

Almost 900 people were killed in July alone, said Mladenov, adding that tens of thousands of Christian and other minorities in Ninewa province had been forced to flee "while many others have been executed or kidnapped."

"Christians have been given an ultimatum to convert, pay a tax, leave or face imminent execution," he said. "Shias, Turkomen, Yazidis and Shabaks are facing systematic abductions, killings or the destruction of their property."

While warning that the situation remained grim, the envoy said the "solution to the crisis cannot be found in the toolbox of military operations."

A new president and government must be elected quickly to lead the country out of crisis, he urged.

"Iraq cannot afford a protracted government formation process, as the current threats continue to challenge the existence of the Iraqi state," he said.

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