Israeli military tells Lebanese who evacuated not to return to homes until further notice
From CNN’s Charbel Mallo and Irene Nasser
The Israeli military has called on “all residents of Lebanese villages who have evacuated their homes” not to return home “until further notice.”
Arabic spokesperson Avichay Adraee said that Israeli strikes are continuing.
Adraee has been posting multiple messages daily warning residents of over 120 towns and villages throughout Lebanon, calling on them to leave their homes and evacuate.
Lebanese authorities say over 1.2 million people have been displaced since fighting escalated last month. Many have been housed temporarily in schools across the country, or camped out on sidewalks, in parks, churches and mosques.
Israel’s kibbutz Be’eri became the symbol of Hamas’ brutality. Some survivors are determined to return
From CNN’s Matthew Chance and Yon Pomrenze
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04:21 – Source: CNN
Scorch marks and bullet holes scar the battered walls of the Haran family home in kibbutz Be’eri. Its tiled roof has caved in, windows smashed, littering the floors with sharp shards of terracotta and glass – the debris, still untouched, of a day of horror for Israel.
“This house tells the story of Be’eri,” says Yarden Tzemach, a farmer and surviving resident of the kibbutz, one of the Israeli communities near Gaza that was overrun by Hamas militants last year.
“In this house, people were murdered. A family, including three children, were kidnapped from here,” he says.
Outside, beneath the fruit trees in the back yard, a toddler’s ride-on toy car, adorned with stickers of Winnie the Pooh, sits amid the rubble, a stark reminder of the lives shattered here.
In some neighborhoods of Be’eri, barely a building was left intact. More than 100 of its 1,100 residents were killed and another 30 abducted to Gaza on October 7.
Home after home was burned out or reduced to rubble and – a year on – many remain as poignant monuments to an ongoing trauma. At least 10 residents of the kibbutz, all friends and neighbors of each other, are among the more than 100 Israelis believed to still be held hostage.
Nearly 100 residents to have so far returned, with some working to bring kibbutz Be’eri, formerly a self-sustaining farming community, back to life.
56 min ago
Israeli military tells Lebanese who evacuated not to return to homes until further notice
From CNN’s Charbel Mallo and Irene Nasser
The Israeli military has called on “all residents of Lebanese villages who have evacuated their homes” not to return home “until further notice.”
Arabic spokesperson Avichay Adraee said that Israeli strikes are continuing.
Adraee has been posting multiple messages daily warning residents of over 120 towns and villages throughout Lebanon, calling on them to leave their homes and evacuate.
Lebanese authorities say over 1.2 million people have been displaced since fighting escalated last month. Many have been housed temporarily in schools across the country, or camped out on sidewalks, in parks, churches and mosques.
Israel’s kibbutz Be’eri became the symbol of Hamas’ brutality. Some survivors are determined to return
From CNN’s Matthew Chance and Yon Pomrenze
Video Ad Feedback
04:21 – Source: CNN
Scorch marks and bullet holes scar the battered walls of the Haran family home in kibbutz Be’eri. Its tiled roof has caved in, windows smashed, littering the floors with sharp shards of terracotta and glass – the debris, still untouched, of a day of horror for Israel.
“This house tells the story of Be’eri,” says Yarden Tzemach, a farmer and surviving resident of the kibbutz, one of the Israeli communities near Gaza that was overrun by Hamas militants last year.
“In this house, people were murdered. A family, including three children, were kidnapped from here,” he says.
Outside, beneath the fruit trees in the back yard, a toddler’s ride-on toy car, adorned with stickers of Winnie the Pooh, sits amid the rubble, a stark reminder of the lives shattered here.
In some neighborhoods of Be’eri, barely a building was left intact. More than 100 of its 1,100 residents were killed and another 30 abducted to Gaza on October 7.
Home after home was burned out or reduced to rubble and – a year on – many remain as poignant monuments to an ongoing trauma. At least 10 residents of the kibbutz, all friends and neighbors of each other, are among the more than 100 Israelis believed to still be held hostage.
Nearly 100 residents to have so far returned, with some working to bring kibbutz Be’eri, formerly a self-sustaining farming community, back to life.