A US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hizbullah appeared to hold on its first day as the Israeli military warned displaced Lebanese civilians not to try to return to homes near the border.
The deal, which took effect at 4am local time, was described by US president Joe Biden as “designed to be a permanent cessation of hostilities”.
Lebanon’s prime minister Najib Mikati said it was time for the country to “begin the process of rebuilding what was destroyed”. “Despite the great pain and this great catastrophe that afflicted the nation ... it is a new day,” he said.
Thousands of the more than one million people displaced by the conflict began attempting to return to their homes in southern Lebanon and Beirut’s bombed-out southern suburbs on Wednesday.
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But in a sign of the fragility of the deal, the Israel Defense Forces issued multiple warnings to residents of border regions not to return to their villages or approach Israeli forces.
[ Hizbullah withdrawal will not erase its presence in south LebanonOpens in new window ]
The military said people were “absolutely forbidden” to travel south of the Litani river, which runs up to 30km north of the Israel-Lebanon border, between 5pm on Wednesday and 7am on Thursday, and suggested that doing so would violate the terms of the deal.
An Israeli security official said the country’s jets were still patrolling over Lebanon and that ground troops were positioned inland and “prepared for any developments and any violations”.
He added that since the morning there had been “several instances” in which “suspicious people” had come close to Israeli troops, who responded with warning fire.
Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s office said Israeli troops had arrested four Hizbullah militants who had entered a “prohibited area” of southern Lebanon.
The Lebanese army also called on civilians to wait before returning to occupied parts of southern Lebanon and to exercise caution due to unexploded ordnance in other areas.
More than 3,800 Lebanese and 130 Israelis have been killed in the fighting, which was triggered when Hizbullah, the Iran-backed militant group, began firing into northern Israel in the days after Hamas’s October 7th, 2023, attack from Gaza.
About 60,000 Israelis have been evacuated from the north of their country due to Hizbullah rocket, missile and drone fire.
The offensive dealt a series of devastating blows to Hizbullah, killing its long-time leader Hassan Nasrallah and damaging large amounts of its weapons and infrastructure, as well as causing much destruction in broad swathes of the country’s east and south.
In a pre-recorded video message on Tuesday evening, Mr Netanyahu said the objective of the war had been to return northern Israeli residents to their homes. But he stopped short of calling for them to do so immediately.
Northern Israeli mayors and regional council heads had criticised Mr Netanyahu on Tuesday for agreeing to the deal.
Under the terms of the agreement, announced by Mr Biden and approved by Israel’s cabinet, the IDF will gradually withdraw from Lebanon over 60 days and be replaced by the Lebanese army.
The Lebanese government is formally required to “prevent Hizbullah and all other armed groups in the territory of Lebanon from carrying out any operations against Israel”, while Israel is obliged “not to carry out any offensive military operations against Lebanese targets”.
Hizbullah will be barred from rebuilding its infrastructure in southern Lebanon, and its fighters are meant to move mainly north of the Litani river.
The deal is based on UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the previous Israel-Hizbullah war in 2006 but was never properly implemented.
Hizbullah has accepted the ceasefire agreement, according to people involved in the negotiations.
Iran also welcomed the ceasefire, despite previously insisting that Israel had to end its war against Hamas in Gaza before the hostilities could stop.
Hizbullah is the most powerful force in the Tehran-led “axis of resistance”, an umbrella of militant groups that began launching attacks against Israel in solidarity with Hamas.
Hamas issued a statement commending Hizbullah’s “immense sacrifices” and the “pivotal role” it had played over the past year’s hostilities, but stopped short of praising the ceasefire.
Mr Biden said the US and France would work with Israel and Lebanon for this week’s deal to be fully implemented, adding there would be no US troops deployed in southern Lebanon.
He added that his administration would pursue an effort to revive talks among Turkey, Egypt, Qatar and Israel on a Gaza ceasefire.
Mike Waltz, the national security adviser of president-elect Donald Trump, has also welcomed what he termed “concrete steps towards de-escalation in the Middle East”.
In parts of Dahiyeh, an area of Beirut where Hizbullah has a controlling presence, traffic was at a standstill as people sought to return to their homes. Many waved flags of Hizbullah and Lebanon as they sang and fired shots in the air in celebration.
“As soon as the bombs stopped this morning, I came here,” said Hajj Amin, a 56-year-old notary public. “I just wanted to see with my own eyes what the enemy had done to my neighbourhood.”
Nabih Berri, speaker of the Lebanese parliament, called on his compatriots to “return to your land, for it will be glorified by your return to it, even if you live in the rubble of houses”.
Mr Netanyahu said that “the duration of the ceasefire depends on what will happen in Lebanon”.
He also insisted he had reached “full understandings” with the US that Israel would strike Hizbullah if it broke the terms of the deal.
“If Hizbullah violates the agreement and tries to arm itself, we will attack,” Mr Netanyahu said. “If it tries to rebuild terrorist infrastructure near the border, we will attack. If it launches a rocket, if it digs a tunnel, if it brings in a truck with missiles, we will attack.”
– Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024