Foreign Secretary, , ended a one-day visit to
Lebanon on Thursday, his first official visit to the country as
Foreign Secretary, following his previous visit as Prime Minister
in September 2015 and his fourth visit to the Middle East as
Foreign Secretary.
, accompanied by Lord Ahmad,
Minister of State for the Middle East, met with Prime Minister
Najib Mikati, Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri, Lebanese Armed
Forces (LAF) Commander General Joseph Aoun, and Head of Mission
and Force Commander of the United Nations Interim Force in
Lebanon, Lieutenant General Aroldo Lázaro Sáenz.
In his meetings, raised his concerns on the
rising tensions along Lebanon’s boundary with Israel and
underlined the UK’s commitment to support the de-escalation of
violence.
During a visit to the Rayak military airbase in the Bekaa,
saw first-hand how the UK and
Lebanon are working closely together on providing training for
the four Land Border Regiments. Cameron reaffirmed the
longstanding and proud partnership with the Lebanese Army.
The Foreign Secretary announced UK support for the LAF, which has
now surpassed £100 million since 2009. To date, the UK has
supported the construction of 78 border towers, the provision of
344 Land Rovers, 3450 sets of PPE to soldiers deployed on border
operations, 100 Land Rover armoured patrol vehicles trained and
mentored over 26,500 LAF personnel in border operations and
internal security.
The Foreign Secretary also announced £7.35 million of new UK
aid funding to the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA) Lebanon Humanitarian Fund, which supports UN
agencies and NGOs to provide food, water, shelter and other basic
support to vulnerable communities across Lebanon. And a
£2.6m contribution to support the education of vulnerable
children through a network of community centres for out of school
children as part of UNICEF and the Ministry of Education and
Higher Education’s (MEHE) Transition and Resilience Education
Fund (TREF).
The visit builds on the Foreign Secretary’s regional visits last
week and this week. He continues to push for an immediate pause
to get aid in and hostages out, and building towards a
sustainable, permanent ceasefire.
Foreign Secretary said:
The UK is working to help preserve stability in Lebanon and
prevent a damaging regional escalation.
We’re supporting the Lebanon Armed Forces – we’ve trained over
26,500 Lebanese soldiers and are giving further humanitarian aid
to help the most vulnerable.
Thank you PM Najib Mikati and Speaker Berri.
British Ambassador to Lebanon Hamish Cowell said:
Yesterday’s visit by Foreign Secretary and Minister for the Middle
East Lord Ahmad reaffirms the UK’s long-standing support and
commitment to Lebanon’s stability and security.
The situation across the Blue Line is fragile and an escalation
in violence is not in anyone’s interests. In his meetings, the
Foreign Secretary stressed the need for a cessation of
hostilities and implementation of UNSCR 1701. This is critical if
we are to see a long-term solution for peace.
We are proud of our steadfast support to the Lebanese Armed
Forces, which will continue to strengthen their ability to manage
and respond to security challenges. Our support to the most
vulnerable in Lebanon also continues.