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[ Thursday, 14 August 2008 ]
 

Damascus says Shebaa Farms boundaries won't be drawn

Syria and Lebanon agree to draw formal border

Lebanese President Suleiman (L) with Syrian President Assad (R) in Damascus
Lebanese President Suleiman (L) with Syrian President Assad (R) in Damascus

DAMASCUS (Agencies)

Syria and Lebanon agreed on Thursday to resume work towards formally demarcating their borders but Damascus said the boundaries of the disputed Shebaa Farms would not be drawn until Israel withdrew from them.

Demarcation of the borders between Syria and Lebanon would be a major step towards meeting international demands on Damascus to formalise ties with its smaller neighbour.

The neighbours also agreed to examine another thorny issue, the fate of hundreds of people who have been missing "in the two countries" since the 1975-1990 civil war in Lebanon, it said.

Lebanese President Michel Suleiman and his Syrian counterpart Bashar al-Assad agreed the step at a summit in Damacsus, according to a joint statement.

"The two presidents agreed on...the resumption of the work of the joint committee to define and draw the Syrian-Lebanese borders," the statement said.

Asked whether that would include the Shebaa Farms, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem said: "The definition of the Shebaa Farms cannot happen under occupation."

Lebanese group Hezbollah, which is backed by Syria and Iran, cites the occupation of the Shebaa Farms as one reason for keeping its arsenal.

Israel considers Shebaa Farms part of the Golan Heights, which it occupied in 1967, while Syria and Lebanon say they are part of south Lebanon, from which Israel withdrew in 2000.

The United Nations declared Israel's withdrawal complete. A 2006 U.N. Security Council resolution urged Syria to demarcate borders, especially in areas where the boundaries are uncertain.

Suleiman's visit to Damascus underlined improving ties between Lebanon and Syria, which dominated its neighbour until 2005 when the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri forced it to withdraw troops from the country.

The presidents formally agreed on Wednesday to establish diplomatic relations at ambassadorial level, another step which countries included France and the United States had demanded of Syria.

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