Thousands of displaced Lebanese return from Syria as ceasefire with Israel holds

28 November 2024, 17:04

Syria Lebanon Israel
Syria Lebanon Israel. Picture: PA

Of the six border crossings between Lebanon and Syria, two remain functional after Israeli airstrikes forced the others shut.

Thousands of people made the crossing back into Lebanon from Syria on the second day of a ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel, after nearly 14 months of fighting.

At the Jousieh border crossing in the Qusair area of Syria’s Homs province, on Lebanon’s north-eastern border, bumper-to-bumper cars lined up on Thursday waiting to be cleared for crossing.

All four lanes were taken up by cars making their way into Lebanon, while those waiting to cross into Syria had to use an offroad.

Syria Lebanon Israel
A girl waits at the border between Lebanon and Syria as Lebanese families return to Lebanon (Omar Sanadiki/AP)

Of the six border crossings between Lebanon and Syria, two remain functional after Israeli airstrikes forced the others shut.

The two countries share a border 375 kilometres (233 miles) long.

Over 600,000 people fleeing Lebanon poured into Syria in the past year, most of them after the war between Israel and Hezbollah escalated in mid-September.

The cross-border flow was a striking reversal in fortunes given that Lebanon is still hosting more than one million Syrian refugees who fled the war in their country that began in 2011.

As the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah took hold early on Wednesday, thousands of people began their return to Lebanon.

Families packed into vehicles with suitcases, mattresses and blankets, while children clutched backpacks, some wrapped in blankets, as they made their way back to Lebanon on Thursday.

Syria Lebanon Israel
Lebanese families sit in traffic as they return to Lebanon through the Jousieh border crossing in Qusair, Syria (Omar Sanadiki/AP)

The mood was mixed with relief and sorrow as many returnees faced the grim reality of returning to homes that might be destroyed.

“We have been in Syria since September 23, we had to leave our jobs, our homes and our loved ones because of the war,” said Hasan Fliti, a 54-year-old dairy shop owner who is returning to Lebanon with his wife and two children.

“I am happy that there is a ceasefire and there is no more destruction. You are not afraid anymore of the airstrikes to hit.”

On the first day of the ceasefire, more than 2,000 people crossed into Lebanon, a Syrian security official at the Jousieh border told The Associated Press.

On Thursday, more than 4,000 crossed back into Lebanon and the number continues to rise.

The hall at the border was filled with families waiting to get their passports or IDs stamped.

Syria Lebanon Israel
Workers repair a bridge over the Assi river in Qusair, Syria (Omar Sanadiki/AP)

Some smoked, others sat on their luggage, waiting for clearance as the flow of returnees steadily increased.

Among them was 37-year-old Wafa Wehbe, who had sought refuge with her family in Syria for more than a month.

“My house is gone, but it is an indescribable feeling to go back,” she said. “There’s a tragic sensation for the martyrs who had to die. The children are mourning.”

Wehbe’s home in Khiyam, located in an area still under Israeli control, was destroyed, but she said she will now stay at her sister’s.

“I am also going back to mourn our martyrs. They died fighting at the frontlines,” she said.

Ghinwa Arzouni, who had sought refuge in Homs from southern Lebanon, said the journey home is both a relief and a challenge.

“We’re excited to go back, but I am afraid of the trip, it’s a long way back,” she said.

“Our house in the south is okay, it might have broken glass but will have to get there first to inspect for ourselves. We hope to return to Syria as tourists and not displaced.”

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Uganda Red Cross workers search for bodies

Death toll rises to at least 15 after landslides bury 40 homes in eastern Uganda

Sweden-China-Ship

Sweden asks for China’s cooperation over cables cut while Chinese ship nearby

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze, left, Bidzina Ivanishvili, leader of the created Georgian Dream party which he initiated, and Mikheil Kavelashvili, who was nominated by the governing Georgi

Georgia suspends talks on joining the EU for four years

Residents check their destroyed houses after they returned to Qana village, southern Lebanon

Israel launches first airstrike on Lebanon since ceasefire

School phone ban

Australian Senate passes social media ban for children under 16

Calin Georgescu holds a finger beneath his eye

Romanian court orders recount of presidential election first round

Australia will ban social media for under-16s.

Australia passes world-first law banning under-16s from social media

Smoke rises amid fighting between opposition factions and Syrian government troops in Majdaliya

Syrian rebels attack government forces in Aleppo province

Red Sea and divers

'There was no plan of escape': Divers aboard vessel run by firm operating Red Sea tourist boat flag safety fears

Venice Opera

Racism row erupts after director of Othello opera in Venice refuses to use ‘blackface’ on star

A building destroyed by a Russian strike on a residential neighbourhood in Odesa,

Russian aerial bombardment cuts power to one million homes in Ukraine

Israel has fired on people "suspected of breaching" its ceasefire with Hezbollah

Israeli military fires at 'suspects' in south Lebanon 'violating ceasefire agreement'

Rescuers use heavy machine to clear mud from a road following a landslide that hit several vehicles and killed multiple people in Deli Serdang, North Sumatra

Rains trigger deadly landslide on Indonesia’s Sumatra island

A police car outside the Ramsey house in January 1997

Police deny sitting on evidence as Netflix doc examines JonBenet Ramsey killing

An Su-34 bomber of the Russian air force drops bombs on Ukrainian positions

Russia strikes cities across Ukraine, targeting energy infrastructure

Candace Owens smiles and flashes a peace symbol

Conservative US influencer Candace Owens barred from New Zealand