Lebanon's president announced Tuesday that the first round of negotiations with Israel on border demarcation, to be held on Wednesday at the UN headquarters in the southern Naqoura city, will be "technical" and specific to maritime borders, according to a written statement by the presidency.
Michel Aoun chaired a meeting with participation of Defense Minister Zeina Akar, Army Commander General Joseph Aoun, and the members of the negotiating delegation, the statement said.
The
negotiations will be held under the auspices of the UN, Aoun said,
adding that "the US presence in the meetings serves as a facilitating
mediator for the process”.
Earlier
Monday, the presidency’s media office had announced in a statement the
names of the technical negotiation delegation for demarcating its
southern borders with Israel.
Lebanon’s government on Monday objected to the presidency’s mechanism for appointing the negotiating delegation.
The
government said that negotiations and the assignment of delegations
should be decided "by joint agreement between the president of the
republic and the head of government, and any other approach constitutes a
clear violation of the constitution with consequent results."
Earlier
this month, Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced that
negotiations would start with Israel in the middle of the month.
Lebanon is locked in a conflict with Israel over an area in the Mediterranean Sea spanning about 860 square kilometers (some 332 square miles), known as Zone No. 9, which is rich in oil and gas.
In 2016, Beirut announced launch of the first round of licenses for exploration.
The maritime borders between Lebanon and Israel have not seen any military conflicts, unlike the land borders.
Hezbollah controls the area bordering Israel, and sporadic tensions take place as Tel Aviv accuses the group of attempting to breach the border.
(Anadolu Agency, October 14, 2020)