Afghan Voice Agency (AVA): The ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel has entered its second day, while the occupying army has warned residents of southern Lebanon against moving south of the Litani River from 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday to 7:00 a.m. on Friday local time.
Israeli forces are still in the area, and thousands of residents of cities and villages bombed by the occupying army are returning to their homes.
Al-Arabi Al-Jadeed wrote: On Wednesday night, Hezbollah announced in a statement that it had won over Israel.
According to this report, the Lebanese Islamic Resistance added in a statement to the Lebanese: The victory was from God and was your right in the matter, and you returned to your villages and cities with pride. The fighters will remain at the peak of readiness to confront the attacks and greed of the Israeli enemy and will not take their eyes off the movements and retreat of the enemy behind the border.
According to Al-Arabi Al-Jadeed, the Lebanese army announced in a statement that it has strengthened its forces south of the Litani River and expanded government control in coordination with UNIFIL forces, in line with the Lebanese government’s commitment to implementing Security Council Resolution 1701 and related commitments, especially in the field of deploying army and security forces south of the Litani.
According to this report, Amit Halevi, a member of the Knesset (Israeli parliament) from the Likud party, said: “There was no absolute victory in Lebanon.”
At the same time, the governor of Baalbek al-Hermel in eastern Lebanon announced that half of the displaced have returned to their homes.
At the same time, as the ceasefire came into effect, the results of the latest poll in the occupied territories show that the majority of Zionists believe that the Zionist regime failed to defeat Hezbollah.
According to these results, 60.8 percent of those questioned said that the Israeli regime did not defeat Hezbollah.
The results also showed that only 25.8 percent of those questioned believed that the Israeli regime had won, and another 13.4 percent said they were not sure. The ceasefire on the Lebanese front was widely criticized by the Israeli regime's domestic political circles, who described such an agreement as a defeat and a failure for the regime.