Tánaiste accuses Israeli PM of undermining UN

Getty Images Micheal Martin wears a navy suit and blue shirt Getty ImagesThe tánaiste is attending a meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Luxembourg.The deputy leader of the Irish government has accused Benjamin Netanyahu of undermining the United Nations.
Tánaiste (deputy prime minister) Micheál Martin was reacting to the Israeli prime minister's call for peacekeepers of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) to withdraw from areas in the south of the country.
Irish Defence Force peacekeepers have been in Lebanon since 1978, with over 30,000 troops passing through the region in that time.
Most are located in a base called Camp Shamrock.
Netanyahu 'needs to step back'Irish Defence Forces Irish defence force soldiers carrying water into a building in southern LebanonIrish Defence ForcesIrish troops refused to leave their post despite orders from IsraelIn recent days, Irish troops refused to leave their post near the border with Lebanon despite orders from Israel.
The tánaiste is attending a meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Luxembourg.
The Fianna Fáil party leader said that the Israeli prime minister ”is essentially now undermining the United Nations and the United Nations peacekeeping force, and the very rules-based international order, and he needs to step back".
"The international community needs to be very clear, and my colleagues at the European Council need to be very clear about the primacy of the international rules-based order," Martin added.
"The United Nations is at the heart of that, and United Nations peacekeepers are at the heart of that."
'Drive the eyes and ears out of Lebanon'The UN peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon said Israeli tanks forced their way into one of its positions early on Sunday morning.
It said rounds were fired nearby that saw smoke enter the camp, causing 15 peacekeepers to suffer skin irritations and gastrointestinal reactions.
The IDF offered a different version of events, saying it had encroached on a Unifil position to evacuate soldiers who had been wounded by an anti-tank missile.
Prior to Sunday's incidents, five peacekeepers had been injured in recent days.
No Irish troops have been injured.
Following international criticism about attacks on Unifl personnel and bases, Mr Netanyahu said in a video message yesterday evening: "We regret the harm to Unifl soldiers and we are doing our utmost to prevent such harm."
"But the simplest and most obvious way to ensure this is simply to withdraw them from the danger zone."
Martin accused Israel of attempting to "drive the eyes and ears out of south Lebanon and to give itself free rein" by attacking Unifl peacekeeping positions.
"We cannot have an undermining and a chipping away of the status or the credibility or structures of the United Nations and particularly its peacekeeping forces," he said.
'Unifil is definitely not the enemy'The Israel Defence Forces has denied targeting UN peacekeeping forces in southern Lebanon and defended orders for them to withdraw from combat areas.
Speaking to the BBC's Newshour programme about Unifil, the IDF's International Spokesperson Peter Lerner said: "We've asked. They decided to stay. And there are dangers in staying in a combat zone.
He went on to say that Hezbollah has established a combat zone "within the realm of the responsibility of Unifil".
"So if you expect us not to take those out, because Unifil will say we don't want to evacuate.
"We'll say we will push forward. We will fulfil our military goals.
"Unifil is definitely not the enemy. We suggest they evacuate for their own safety," he added.