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Inside Lebanon A life of raids and bombings

The Guardian

|

May 28, 2026

For hours, Hussein Abdel al-El and his wife, Um Alaa, did not move.

- William Christou

They waited in the bathroom in the dark, not daring to touch their phones; the faint glow of the screen might give them away to the Israeli soldiers outside.

It was 1am, the Israelis were raiding their neighbours’ house, and the septuagenarian couple did not want their door knocked on next.

In the next house over, Israeli soldiers had forced residents against the wall at gunpoint, zip-tying their hands. They searched the home and interrogated its occupants before putting a black bag over the head of a shepherd, Qassem al-Qadari, taking him to an Israeli military base across the border for further questioning.

The soldiers were gone by daylight. And so were the couple's neighbours. All the other houses on the outskirts of Kfarchouba, a mountain-side town on the Lebanon-Israel border, had been abandoned after the raids.

Kfarchouba is one of a handful of non-Shia-majority villages where the Israeli military has allowed people to stay in their homes, despite being within the "yellow line", a six-mile-wide strip along the Israel-Lebanon border that the Israeli military has occupied since the 17 April ceasefire agreement with Lebanon.

Israel has forcibly displaced the residents of most of the villages within the "yellow line" and has steadily worked to demolish the now-empty towns with explosives and excavators.

After Israel's invasion of Lebanon began, a routine developed in Kfarchouba. During the day, people gathered in the town's centre and looked down over Khiam and the Marjayoun plain, which stretches out below them. They watched as Israeli F-16s swooped overhead and dropped bombs on the towns below, the sounds of explosions growing more distant as Israeli forces steadily pushed back Hezbollah fighters and advanced deeper into Lebanon.

At night, families huddled around heaters in their homes; they did not dare to go out.

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