Israel-Lebanon 10-day cease-fire takes effect as displaced residents begin returning south
The Facts
- A 10-day cease-fire between Israel and Lebanon went into effect at midnight on Friday.
- President Donald Trump announced the cease-fire late Thursday.
- The cease-fire followed weeks of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon.
- Multiple reports said Iran had linked a Lebanon cease-fire to broader diplomacy over ending or advancing talks related to the U.S.-Iran conflict.
- Thousands of displaced Lebanese began returning toward southern Lebanon after the cease-fire took effect.
- Lebanese authorities say more than 2,100 people have been killed in Lebanon in the current round of fighting.
- Reports from the first hours of the truce said fighting or alleged violations occurred around the time the cease-fire began.
Context
Why is this cease-fire significant beyond Lebanon?
The truce could ease a major obstacle in U.S.-Iran diplomacy because Iran had insisted that fighting in Lebanon also stop as part of a broader arrangement tied to talks over the U.S.-Iran conflict WSJ,NYT,NYT,haaretz.com.
What happened as the cease-fire took effect?
As the truce began at midnight, thousands of displaced people started traveling back to southern Lebanon, while some outlets also reported strikes, artillery fire, or alleged cease-fire violations in the opening hours L'Orient Today,NYT,NYT,GlobalSecurity.org.
How severe has the fighting in Lebanon been?
Lebanese authorities say the current round of fighting has killed more than 2,100 people and displaced over one million residents, most of them from southern Lebanon NYT,haaretz.com,UPI.
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