Thousands of displaced Lebanese civilians yesterday took to the road, hoping a 10-day ceasefire with Israel would allow them to return to their homes in southern Beirut and the nation’s war-torn south.
Roads heading south from the capital were clogged with traffic, despite Israel’s defense minister warning that its operation against Hezbollah was not yet complete and that civilians might have to evacuate once again.
Minutes before the ceasefire came into effect at midnight, a series of Israeli strikes in the southern city of Tyre killed at least 13 people and destroyed six residential buildings, a city official said.
Photo: Reuters
For some returnees, the short, temporary truce between Israel and the Lebanese government, brokered under pressure from US President Donald Trump, was a new source of hope.
“Our feelings are indescribable, pride and victory,” 37-year-old Amani Atrash said from her car seat on a road leading to a bridge into southern Lebanon, adding that she hoped the truce would be extended.
Under the terms of the ceasefire, Israel reserves the right to continue targeting Hezbollah to prevent “planned, imminent or ongoing attacks.”
Photo: EPA
It also said it would maintain a 10km security zone along the border in southern Lebanon.
Israeli Minister of Defense Israel Katz said the area stretching from this security zone north to the Litani River had not yet been “cleared of terrorists and weapons” and that if diplomatic pressure did not achieve that goal, then military action could resume.
“If the fighting resumes, those residents who return to the security zone will have to be evacuated to allow completion of the mission,” he said.
According to details of the truce deal released by the US Department of State, Lebanon “with international support ... will take meaningful steps to prevent Hezbollah” from undertaking hostile acts against Israeli targets.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, who had been resisting US pressure to talk directly to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu before the ceasefire was in place, said that direct negotiations with Israel were “crucial.”
Beirut’s goal is to “consolidate a ceasefire, secure the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the occupied southern territories, recover prisoners, and address outstanding border disputes,” he said in a statement.
Meanwhile, the Iran-backed movement Hezbollah said its finger remains “on the trigger” in the event of any Israeli violations.
Despite the warnings against returning to the south, long lines of displaced families began traversing the bomb-damaged Qasmiyeh Bridge near the southern city of Tyre after bulldozers restored the crossing so they could head home, Agence France-Presse journalists said.
Across the border in Israel, the military’s home front command had not yet removed restrictions on civilian movements in vulnerable border areas.
Still, some civilians there were daring to hope for a return to a more normal life.
“I’ve got a three-year-old girl and a two-month-old baby, and the whole time we’ve just not left the house because you never know when there’ll be a rocket attack,” 31-year-old Ofir Ben-Ari said.
“It’s been crazy, but I think things will be quiet now and I’ll be able to take my daughter to the park,” she added.
The ceasefire represents a key step in Washington’s efforts to reach a deal to end its war with Iran, after Tehran insisted that halting the Lebanon fighting must be part of any agreement.
Pakistan has been leading a diplomatic push to restart face-to-face talks between Tehran and Washington, and Trump said they were “very close” to striking an agreement.
The fighting broke out in Lebanon on March 2 when Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel a few days after the start of the Middle East war in retribution for the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei.
Trump said he had spoken to Netanyahu and Aoun ahead of the truce, which he said they had agreed “in order to achieve PEACE between their Countries.”
He later said he expected Netanyahu and Aoun to visit the White House in the coming days. A top-level face-to-face meeting between the Lebanese and Israeli leadership would be a watershed moment for the region, but it remained to be seen whether it would take place.
Netanyahu said the ceasefire with Lebanon offered an opportunity for a “historic peace agreement” with Beirut — but insisted that the disarmament of Hezbollah remained a precondition.
Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam welcomed Trump’s announcement, saying a truce was a “key Lebanese demand that we have pursued since the very first day of the war.”
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