The Israeli military has warned Lebanese citizens not to return to 60 villages in the south of the country, three days into a ceasefire deal.
The Israel Defense Forces, IDF, published a map showing a swathe of territory several miles deep, which it said residents must not return to. Anyone who did, it said, would be putting themselves in danger.
More than a million Lebanese have been displaced by the fighting, mostly from the south. Tens of thousands of Israelis have also been displaced.
The truce came into effect on Wednesday morning, though officials in Israel and Lebanon have accused each other of already breaching it.
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On Thursday, the IDF said its forces fired artillery and carried out air strikes against targets in southern Lebanon. It added that it had fired at suspects after spotting activity at a Hezbollah weapons facility, and vehicles arriving in several areas, which it said breached the ceasefire.
Lebanon accused Israel of violating the agreement “multiple times” and said it was monitoring the situation.
A multinational monitoring group which includes representatives from the US, France, and the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon was set up as part of the ceasefire to oversee compliance with its terms.
In his first interview since the ceasefire was declared, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had instructed the IDF to wage “an intensive war” should Hezbollah commit a “massive violation” of the ceasefire.
The ceasefire “can be short”, he said in the interview with Israel’s Channel 14.
Under the terms of the agreement, which was brokered by the US and France, Israeli forces will withdraw from south Lebanon as the Lebanese army deploys there simultaneously with no other armed groups allowed to operate in the area. This is meant to happen within 60 days from the start of the ceasefire.
BBC.com