Macron tells Israel that Hezbollah must be disarmed 'by the Lebanese themselves'
Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said Tuesday the country needed 500 million euros to address the war's humanitarian fallout, as a fragile 10-day ceasefire holds between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah.
The appeal came after a meeting in Paris between French President Emmanuel Macron and the Lebanese prime minister to discuss the ceasefire in Lebanon and France's support for the country's "territorial integrity."
"Lebanon needs 500 million euros to tackle the humanitarian crisis over the next six months," Salam said during a joint press conference with Macron.
Lebanon on Tuesday raised the toll from six weeks of war to 2,454 dead and 7,658 wounded since the conflict began on March 2, days after the broader Middle East war erupted.
For his part, Macron urged Israel to "renounce its territorial ambitions" in Lebanon, adding that Hezbollah must "cease" firing into Israeli territory and be disarmed "by the Lebanese themselves".
He further called for an agreement between Israel and Lebanon that guarantees "the security of both countries, Lebanon's territorial integrity, and lays the groundwork for the normalization of their relations."
New talks between Lebanon's and Israel's U.S. ambassadors will take place Thursday in Washington, according to a U.S. State Department official, after the first direct talks between the two countries in decades were held on April 14.
Lebanon is demanding the "complete withdrawal" of Israeli forces from its territory and the return of Lebanese prisoners and displaced persons, as part of the negotiations with Israel, Salam said on Tuesday ahead of the talks.
The Paris meeting followed an ambush on U.N. peacekeepers in Lebanon that left one French soldier dead and three others wounded, in an attack France blamed on Hezbollah.
Macron said France was "ready to maintain its commitment on the ground" in Lebanon even after the U.N. peacekeeping mission ends at the end of the year, winding down a decades-long mandate serving as a buffer between Lebanon and Israel.
Hezbollah -- which strongly opposes the planned Lebanon-Israel talks -- denied involvement in the attack that killed the French peacekeeper.





