"The
quantity of waters that we will be pumping is less than what is our
right," he added.
The
test was carried out by technicians in the presence of Qabalan, project
contractor Sharif Wehbe and Hussein al-Abdallah, the top official of the
Lebanese Islamic resistance movement, Hezbollah, in the region.
"Our
rights in the Wazzani waters are clear and we will not give up this
right whatever the pressures or threats," Abdallah told reporters.
The
move came after the return to Lebanon late Tuesday, October 8, of U.S.
State Department water expert Charles Lawson to continue seeking a
compromise in Lebanon's water dispute with Israel, AFP reported.
Lawson,
who first visited Lebanon and Israel last month, was expected to hold
talks later Wednesday with Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, officials in
Wazzani told AFP.
Far-right
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has threatened war over Lebanon's
plan to tap the Wazzani, which indirectly feeds the Sea of Galilee,
Israel's main fresh water source.
Lebanon
plans to provide drinking water to an initial 20 villages in the border
area, which was under Israeli occupation for 22 years until the May 2000
Israeli withdrawal.
Beirut
says it will be drawing no more than 10 million cubic meters (325
million cubic feet) per year, way below the 35 million (1.235 billion)
granted to it under an unratified 1955 agreement.
The
formal opening, to be held October 16, will be attended by government
ministers, MPs and tens of thousands of residents, Lebanon's chief
administrator for the border district, Qabalan Qabalan, said.
The
ceremony at this pumping station, little more than a kilometer (barely a
mile) from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, will coincide with a
meeting in Beirut of foreign ministers from the 51-member organization
of French-speaking nations.
Qabalan
insisted that a string of foreign experts who have hurried to inspect
the project since Sharon's threat of war last month had all told the
government privately that Lebanon was within its rights.
"The
foreign experts, including those from the United States, have told us
that our rights in the Wazzani waters are clear, but they have told us
not to say so in the media," the official said.
Israeli
jets have earlier overflew the Wazzani area and other regions of the
country, including Beirut, Wednesday, breaking the sound barrier in the
largest such show of force for several months.
Meanwhile,
Lebanon completed Wednesday a report due to be sent "in the coming
hours" to U.N. chief Kofi Annan to defend its right to exploit
water from the Wazzani river, officials said.
"The
Lebanese foreign ministry will file the report in English and Arabic in
the next hours to U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan," a government
official said.
He
added Lebanon does not accept any mediation over the issue, even as
Washington looks to resolve the crisis, AFP said.
In
case there was a need to arbitrate the dispute, Beirut would only resort
to the United Nations, the official said.
The
file, made up of about 100 pages, was drafted by a committee formed by
the Lebanese government and made up of technical experts, senior civil
servants and chaired by Prime Minister Hariri