Tel Aviv: Following a pattern similar to the tactics used in Gaza, the Israeli military has begun demolishing entire border villages in sout...
Tel Aviv: Following a pattern similar to the tactics used in Gaza, the Israeli military has begun demolishing entire border villages in southern Lebanon using remote-controlled explosives, effectively redrawing the region's map. International observers suggest that Israel is employing a strategy to completely wipe out border settlements.
Villages such as Taybeh, Naqoura, and Deir Seryan were not destroyed through traditional airstrikes, but rather through controlled ground-level explosions.
Verified footage, including reports from The Guardian, shows explosives being rigged to houses across residential blocks and detonated simultaneously, leveling entire neighborhoods in seconds. This "clearing" tactic aims to create a permanent security buffer zone.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz stated that this is the same model previously implemented in Rafah and Beit Hanoun in Gaza. The primary goal is to eliminate any structures that could potentially house Hezbollah tunnels or observation posts.
Israel intends to maintain a specific "security zone" extending up to the Litani River.
Authorities have declared that hundreds of thousands of displaced residents will not be allowed to return until the area is deemed secure.
The destruction of the last major bridge across the Litani River has completely cut off southern Lebanon from the rest of the country.
The humanitarian situation has reached a breaking point as the conflict escalates:
On April 12 alone, attacks in Maroob and Qana killed 11 people. The death toll has surpassed 2,000 since the war resumed on March 2.
Approximately 150,000 people in the southern region are isolated, with no access to food, medicine, or fuel.
The United Nations estimates the regional economic impact of the conflict to be between $120 billion and $194 billion.
Legal experts have characterized the systematic destruction of civilian homes as "domicide." Human rights organizations argue that these actions constitute a clear violation of international law.
For the residents of these areas, there is nothing left to do but watch as their homes, memories, and years of hard work are reduced to rubble.


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