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Ceasefire with Israel brings respite to Lebanon, but obstacles to peace remain
April 17, 2026 International Source: BBC World
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The halt to weeks of fighting is being celebrated in Lebanon, but it will be difficult to ensure it lasts.
Ceasefire with Israel brings respite to Lebanon, but obstacles to peace remain
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Read about our approach to external linking.
Many people have already started to make their way back to where they were displaced from
Two men on motorcycles ride among traffic, as people make victory signs and fly yellow Hezbollah flags, in Nabatieh, Lebanon (17/04/26)
At the stroke of midnight, gunfire and fireworks celebrated the start of the ceasefire in Beirut.
Throughout the morning, smiling crowds gathered along roads leading to Lebanon's south, the heartland of Hezbollah, playing revolutionary music and waving the group's yellow flag as they started their journey back to where they had been forced from by the war.
This is, initially, a 10-day ceasefire after six weeks of a devastating conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shia Muslim militia and political party. But it brings some respite for a country exhausted by the war.
More than 2,100 people have been killed, Lebanese health authorities say, and over a million, or roughly one in five of the population, have been displaced - creating a pressing humanitarian crisis.
Mattresses on top of cars and families on motorbikes indicated that people were on the move - but many are not returning to stay.
In some places, the damage is too extensive and for some there is nothing to go back to at all. Some towns and villages near the border remain under Israeli occupation.
But in the Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs of Beirut, known as Dahieh, the streets remained relatively quiet. The area has been hammered by Israel during the war, and many residential buildings have been reduced to rubble.
In the city's waterfront, where hundreds of displaced families have been living in improvised tents, some said they feared returning.
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the media next to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
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Announced by US President Donald Trump, the ceasefire leaves open questions.
First, it does not mention the withdrawal of Israeli troops from southern Lebanon, which has raised fears that parts of the country will remain occupied even after the war. Israeli officials say their goal is to create a so-called security buffer zone, several miles deep, and many residents of those areas may not be allowed to go back.
Secondly, there is the issue over Hezbollah's weapons, which has long divided this country. Disarmament is a demand of the US, Israel and many Lebanese, who accuse the group of defending the interests of its patron, Iran, and dragging the country into unnecessary wars.
Supporters say Hezbollah is the only protection they have in a weak state and, for now, Hezbollah has refused to discuss the future of its weapons.
Speaking to the BBC in a rare interview, Wafiq Safa, a high-ranking member of Hezbollah's political council, said the group would "never, ever" disarm. He also said there "can be no separation" between Hezbollah and Iran, describing the relationship as "two souls in one body".
"There can be no Hezbollah without Iran, and no Iran without Hezbollah," he said.
The government has very little - if any - influence over Hezbollah. President Joseph Aoun has said disarmament cannot be delivered by force, warning of the possibility of violence, and that it would require negotiations with the group. Observers say that, given Iran's role, any decision about the future of the weapons is likely to be taken in Tehran, not in Beirut.
Finally, according to the deal, Israel may even continue to attack Lebanon, citing security concerns, which may bring the country back to the situation before the most recent fighting - when Israel carried out near-daily attacks on targets and people allegedly linked to Hezbollah, despite the ceasefire that had ended their previous conflict in November 2024. Hezbollah remained quiet.
Trump seems to hope that this could be the beginning of a process to normalise relations between Israel and Lebanon - another divisive topic in the country.
The two neighbours have technically been in a state of war since 1948 and have no diplomatic relations. With parts of Lebanon occupied and Hezbollah yet to be disarmed, progress on that front appears, for now, unlikely.
President Macron blamed the attack on Hezbollah. The Iran-backed armed group denied "any connection" to the incident.
BBC Arabic's correspondent Carine Torbey reports from the border town of Khiam, as the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah in southern Lebanon goes into its second day.
A 10-day truce between the two countries is now in effect, with Iran-backed Hezbollah voicing support, as negotiations continue between the US and Iran.
One man says he cancelled his holiday to Spain due to the rising costs and uncertainty.
Brent crude sinks by a tenth after Iran says the key waterway is open for commercial ships for the rest of the ceasefire.
Faisal Islam talks to some of the world's most powerful people about the conflict and the economy.
Some kind of diplomatic progress is now under way, but is it enough to prevent a return to war?
The measure, a mostly symbolic gesture, lost by a single vote in the closely-divided House of Representatives.