געכאפט דורך טעראר: לבנון'ישע ציווילע אנטלויפן בשעת כעזבאלא באהאלט זיך צווישן זיי.
Hezbollah's Human Shield Tactics Force Mass Exodus From Southern Lebanon
Fresh video out of southern Lebanon shows the human cost of Hezbollah's relentless refusal to disarm, as a convoy of overloaded civilian vehicles, including one heavily damaged SUV, crawls along dusty roads through the region's hills, packed with families and whatever belongings they could grab. The footage is the latest snapshot of a displacement crisis that has now forced more than a million Lebanese from their homes since fighting escalated, with residents once again ordered north of the Zahrani River as Israeli forces move to root out Hezbollah fighters, weapons depots, and command infrastructure embedded deep inside civilian neighborhoods. Israel's military has been explicit about the reasoning: these are not random strikes, but targeted operations against a terror group that has spent years burying its arsenal beneath homes, schools, and mosques.
The blame for this latest wave of suffering lies squarely with Hezbollah, which despite a ceasefire announced in April has continued to operate, rearm, and provoke from inside the very communities it claims to protect. Rather than withdrawing its fighters and weapons as the truce required, Hezbollah has used the lull in fighting to dig back in, leaving Israel little choice but to expand its evacuation zones and combat operations to neutralize the threat before it can strike Israeli civilians again. Lebanese families, many already displaced multiple times since the war began, are once again uprooted, crowding into shelters in Sidon and Tyre, not because Israel seeks to harm them, but because Hezbollah has made their towns and villages into battlefields by choice.
For the people in these convoys, the dusty roads north represent yet another chapter in a tragedy entirely of Hezbollah's making. Every rocket the group fires from a residential courtyard, every weapons cache it stores beneath an apartment building, turns ordinary Lebanese civilians into collateral in a war Hezbollah started and refuses to end. Aid organizations continue to warn of a deepening humanitarian emergency, but the path to ending it has always been clear: Hezbollah disarming and withdrawing, as it agreed to do, rather than gambling with the lives of the very people it claims to defend. Until that happens, the convoys fleeing south Lebanon's hills will keep rolling north.