Shortly after the ceasefire with the Israeli enemy took effect in Lebanon on Wednesday, citizens started to return home in their towns and neighborhoods in Bekaa, south Lebanon and Dahiyeh (the southern suburb of Beirut), defying Israeli threats to return, especially to southern villages.
Israeli occupation army warned soon after the ceasefire began at 4:00 at dawn that residents of south Lebanon should not approach enemy army positions and villages its forces had ordered to be evacuated.
“With the entry into force of the ceasefire agreement and based on its provisions, the IDF remains deployed in its positions inside southern Lebanon,” enemy army spokesman Avichay Adraee said in a post on X, referring to the Israeli occupation forces.
“You are prohibited from heading towards the villages that the IDF has ordered to be evacuated or towards IDF forces in the area.”
However, photos and videos circulated on social media showed streams of cars carrying displaced people heading for southern villages, as the citizens couldn’t wait more to go to their hometowns after 65 days of brutal Israeli aggression that started on September 23.
توثيق لزحمة السير.. النازحون يعودون إلى قراهم في الجنوب.#وقائع pic.twitter.com/XqouGZS10C
— وقائع (@waqa2e3) November 27, 2024
The hours before the truce took effect were some of the most violent in the war, with the Israeli enemy staging violent raids on the capital Beirut, Dahiyeh, Bekaa and southern Lebanon.
The war left at least 3,823 martyrs and injured 15,859 others, in the latest toll provided by the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health on Tuesday.
3823 شهيدا و 15859 جريحا منذ بدء العدوان، وحصيلة يوم أمس 55 شهيدا و 160 جريحا pic.twitter.com/wVykXGwSql
— Ministry of Public Health – Lebanon (@mophleb) November 26, 2024
Source: Al-Manar English Website