Lebanon says men arrested at UNIFIL base had explosives

Other News Materials 12 January 2009 23:01 (UTC +04:00)

Lebanese Defense Minister Elias Murr said Monday material confiscated from a garbage truck near a UNIFIL post in the southern town is a "non-explosive material."

"After examining the material which were disovered in a carbage truck trying to enter a UNIFIL base in southern Lebanon the tests showed they contain no explosive material," Murr said as he entered a cabinet session, dpa reported.

He added the Lebanese security forces have released the suspects arrested in connection with the incident.

On Sunday, the Italian contingent in the United Nations Interim Forces in Southern Lebanon (UNIFIL) arrested two people disguised as cleaners trying to smuggle "plastic material that could be explosives" into a UN base in southern Lebanon, a UN statement said.

The suspicious plastic was found in a garbage truck during a routine search at the entrance of the Italian battalion's headquarter in the village of Tebnine, southern Lebanon.

Italy has 2,500 troops in southern Lebanon, the largest contingent working within UNIFIL.

The peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon grew from around 2,300 to 15,000, in accordance with a UN Security Council resolution in August 2006 that halted 33 days of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah.

Since December 2008, UNIFIL has taken extra precautionary measures after receiving threats from fundamentalist groups with close links to al-Qaeda terrorist network.

On June 25, 2007, six UN peacekeepers from the Spanish battalion were killed and two others injured in a car bombing that targeted their patrol in southern Lebanon. dpa wh sc Germany-Energy/Dutch/ ROUNDUP: Germany's RWE bids to take over Dutch utility Essent =

Essen, Germany (dpa) - Shrugging off recession and gloom, RWE, the German electricity group, announced Monday a friendly cash bid of 9.3 billion euros (12.5 billion dollars) for Dutch energy group Essent.

Like its rival E.ON, Essen-based RWE is now so big that it cannot expect regulatory clearance to take over any other German utility, so it has had to look abroad for merger targets.

Essent retails power in several EU nations including Germany itself.

A statement said RWE would gain 5.3 million new gas and electricity customers, most in the Netherlands along with 250,000 of them in Belgium and 1 million in Germany. RWE will finance the deal with loans.

The takeover, which Essent said would forge the fourth-largest energy supplier in Europe, could prove controversial, with some consumer groups, as well as some competition watchdogs, already worried that the utilities are too big.

RWE said at the end of last year it was also looking for acquisitions in Britain, eastern Europe, the Balkans and Turkey.

RWE said in Essen it aimed to take over Essent's commercial activities in gas and electricity. It said it would not acquire Essent's distribution network, which will be put into new ownership under a European Union policy known as unbundling.

Essent said that through a restructuring, its waste-disposal business would also be excluded from the takeover.

Essent chief executive Michiel Boersma said: "Essent will now team up with a leading and respected foreign partner."

The transaction would convert Arnhem-based Essent, which has a workforce of 7,800, into the RWE operating company in the Netherlands and Belgium, but RWE would retain the Essent brand.

An announcement said the two utility companies had already reached agreement on the terms and conditions. Essent's top board supported it and recommended that Essent's shareholders accept the offer.

The acquisition is the first for RWE since a new chief executive, Juergen Grossmann, took over the Germany company in October 2007.

In a recent newspaper interview, Grossmann said the world financial crisis had not affected RWE, but had made mergers cheaper.

"We can more today for the same money," he told the Sueddeutsche Zeitung.

Essent's gas and electricity sales, excluding turnover by its grid and waste management divisions, totalled 6.5 billion euros last year. RWE had sales nearly seven times as large, of 43 billion euros.

RWE said the takeover would make it "one of the leading energy suppliers in the Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg (Benelux) region."

Essent's strong business as a generator of energy from renewable sources - wind and biomass - would help RWE's efforts to increase its renewables capacity to 4,500 megawatts by 2012, the statement said.

Both companies have also been experimenting with capturing carbon dioxide and storing it underground.

Essent's principal shareholders at the moment are the Dutch provincial administrations of Noord-Brabant, Limburg, Overijssel and Groningen and four municipal groups.

RWE chief executive Grossmann called it "a successful and attractive company with strong market positions in gas and in the power retail market in the Netherlands and Belgium."

RWE already has a Dutch unit, RWE Energy Nederland, supplying gas and electricity to 340,000 households and more than 50,000 businesses.

"Upon completion of the transaction, RWE will supply electricity to over 22.5 million customers and gas to approximately 12.5 million customers in Europe," the statement said.

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