BEIRUT
JANUARY 8 2009 11:17h
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Prime Minister Fouad Siniora`s statement was issued after at least three rockets fired from Lebanon exploded in northern Israel.
Information Minister Tareq Mitri said he did not believe the political and military group Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, was behind the attack.
"Hezbollah assured the Lebanese government that it remains engaged in preserving the stability in Lebanon and respects Security Council resolution 1701," the head of Mitri's office, Toufic Yannieh, quoted the minister as saying.
That implied no involvement by Hezbollah, he said. Hezbollah did not immediately comment in public. There were no claims of responsibility for the attack, to which Israel responded with a salvo of artillery shells into south Lebanon.
Prime Minister Fouad Siniora asked the Lebanese authorities to step up measures and their cooperation with U.N. peacekeepers in south Lebanon to "prevent a repeat of these acts", a statement issued from his office said.
At least three rockets were fired from Lebanon, exploding in northern Israel and wounding two people in an attack seen as linked to Israel's offensive in the Gaza Strip.
"Prime Minister Siniora regards what happened in the south as a violation of the international resolution 1701 and something he does not accept and rejects," the statement said.
Siniora called for an investigation into the rocket attack and also condemned the Israeli artillery salvo.
U.N. Security Council resolution 1701 halted the 34-day war between the Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah and Israel. Under the resolution, the Lebanese army deployed in the south of the country together with thousands of additional U.N. peacekeepers.
The government underlined its commitment to the U.N. resolution, Siniora's statement said, adding whoever launched the rockets wanted to destabilise Lebanon.
Hezbollah has one minister in the Lebanese national unity government formed in July.
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