Israel said it had beseeched civilians to leave before the raid. Picture / Reuters
UNITED NATIONS - The UN Security Council has unanimously adopted a statement deploring the Israel's deadly attack on the southern Lebanese village of Qana but rejected UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan's call for an immediate truce.
The air strike on Qana - the bloodiest single attack during Israel's 19-day-old war on Hizbollah - killed at least 54 civilians, including 37 children.
The UN policy statement expressed "extreme shock and distress" at the strike and asked Annan to report within a week "on the circumstances of this tragic incident."
It stressed "the urgency of securing a lasting, permanent and sustainable ceasefire" and affirmed the council's determination to work "without any further delay" to adopt a resolution "for a lasting settlement of the crisis."
US Ambassador John Bolton said he opposed calling for a truce, saying returning to "business as usual" was not a lasting solution and what was important was to address the "tragic loss of civilian life".
Lebanon's Foreign Ministry official, Nouhad Mahmoud: told reporters, "We were looking for stronger action, stronger language, but we believe that the statement contained language which commits the council for further action."
Israel earlier agreed to suspend its aerial bombardment of southern Lebanon for 48 hours, starting immediately, to allow for an investigation into Sunday's bombing.
It confirmed it would coordinate with the United Nations to allow a 24-hour window for residents of southern Lebanon to leave the area if they wished.
Rescue workers in Qana dug through the rubble with their hands for hours, lifting out the twisted, dust-caked corpses of children.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan earlier urged the Security Council to condemn the attack and call for an immediate end to hostilities. "I am deeply dismayed that my earlier calls for an immediate cessation of hostilities were not heeded," Annan said.
A Lebanese foreign ministry official told the council that more than 60 people were killed, mostly women and children. Police earlier put the toll at 54, 37 of them children.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert expressed "deep sorrow" following the bombing, but vowed the war against Hizbollah would go on.
Israeli UN Ambassador Dan Gillerman told the Security Council that Qana was "a hub for Hizbollah" and said Israel had beseeched the residents of the village to leave. But Lebanon said Israeli air strikes on roads and vehicles made it impossible for people in the south to flee.




