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With Israeli tanks on the ground, Lebanese unable to bury dead

When a. ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah entered effect last. week, Lebanese hotelier Abbas alTannoukhi jumped at the chance. to bury a dead relative in their southern hometown of Khiyam,. damaged for weeks by intense clashes.

Tannoukhi's cousin had been eliminated in one of the last. Israeli airstrikes on Beirut's suburbs before Wednesday's. ceasefire, which stated an end to fighting so homeowners on. both sides of the border could return home.

But with Israeli troops still released in southern Lebanon,. Tannoukhi collaborated his movements with Lebanon's army. Last. Friday, he and his family members pulled into the family graveyard in. Khiyam, 6 km (four miles) from the border, with an ambulance. bring his cousin's body.

We just needed 30 minutes (to bury her), Tannoukhi, 54,. said. However we were shocked when Israeli tanks encircled us -. which's when the gunfire began.

Tannoukhi fled with his family members on foot through the brush,. injuring his hand as he scrambled in between rocks and olive groves. to reach security at a checkpoint operated by Lebanese troops.

Soon later on, they attempted to reach the graveyard again however. stated they were fired on a second time. Unsteady footage shot by. Tannoukhi features sprays of shooting.

We could not bury her. We had to leave her body there in the. ambulance. However we will try again, he informed Reuters.

The ordeal highlights the bitterness and confusion for. homeowners of southern Lebanon who have been unable to return. home due to the fact that Israeli soldiers are still present on Lebanese. area.

Israel's military has issued orders to locals of 60. southern Lebanese towns not to return home, stating they are. forbidden from accessing their home towns up until additional notification.

The U.S.-brokered ceasefire offer grants both Lebanon and. Israel the right to self-defence, but does not consist of. provisions on a buffer zone or restrictions for citizens.

Why did we go back? Since there's a ceasefire, Tannoukhi. said. It's a stop to hostilities. And it is a natural right for. a boy of the south to go to his house.

The Israeli armed force did not immediately react to requests. for remark.

PEACE OF MIND

The ceasefire brought an end to over a year of hostilities. in between Israel and Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, which began. shooting rockets at Israeli military targets in 2023 in assistance of. its Palestinian ally Hamas in Gaza.

Israel went on the offensive in September, battle swathes. of Lebanon's south, east and the southern suburbs of Beirut. More than 1.2 million people left their homes.

After the 60-day ceasefire came into effect last Wednesday,. citizens of Beirut's suburban areas returned home to vast damage,. and some Lebanese from the south were able to go back to homes. even more far from the border.

But both sides started accusing each other of breaking the. deal, with Israel saying suspicious motions in towns along. the south made up infractions and Lebanon's army indicating. Israeli tank fire and airstrikes as breaches.

Mustafa Ibrahim al-Sayyed, a daddy of 12, was hoping to. return home to Beit Lif, about 2 km from the border.

But nearly a week into the ceasefire, he is still living at. a displacement shelter near Tire, a seaside city about 25 km. from the border.

He tried to venture home alone last week, but as quickly as he. shown up, there was tank fire around the town and he got a. cautioning on his phone that his town remained in the Israeli military's. no-go zone.

Sayyed is still stuck in displacement and wishes to get home.

I hope we return to our town so we can get assurance,. he stated.

(source: Reuters)