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Are the Lebanese people caught in the crossfire of a war they didn’t ask for?
The prospects of an Israeli ground incursion in Lebanon have reached their peak, and even a temporary ceasefire seems a distant echo after Israel rejected the deal and Hezbollah remains reluctant to turn away its missile launchpads.
While the number of civilian casualties is surging, Lebanon’s public services are teetering on collapse, especially after years of financial and economic crises that have put the country’s finances on its knees.
Thousands of people are leaving their villages in the south and the Bekaa Valley to find shelter in the provinces of Beirut, the Lebanese mountains, and the north.
Right now, the general sentiment in Lebanon is that one can only hope for an 11th-hour miracle.
“Lebanese people want peace,” Health Minister Firass Abiad told Euronews. “The position of the Lebanese government, and the position of the Lebanese people as well, is that Lebanon does not want war.”
“And from day one, we believe that the best way out of this situation is to have a diplomatic solution, starting with a cease fire in Gaza and the immediate release of the (Israeli) hostages.”
“It is clear that violence is not going to bring us closer to a solution, yet unfortunately, it will make the situation worse,” Abiad pointed out.

A resident checks an apartment that was hit by an Israeli airstrike in Beirut’s southern suburbs, 25 September 2024 AP Photo/Hassan Ammar
Regional and international observers are increasingly persuaded that the ceasefire will not be possible without a powerful political deal. Yet, the prospects of stopping the war seem to go well beyond the borders and the will of the sectarian-based Lebanese institutions.
Unless Israel strikes a deal with Hamas, that is.
According to observers, a humanitarian-led ceasefire in Gaza could help lower the heat threatening to inflame the entire Middle East and whose domino effect could push Lebanon to a new civil war, further complicated due to militias of different types and non-state actors like Hezbollah.
“After the loss of lives of innocent civilians and tens of thousands of women and children in Gaza, now we have a similar situation unfolding in Lebanon,” Abiad said. “Hezbollah has stated clearly that if things stop in Gaza, they will stop all their action.”
“Therefore, everybody understands that a ceasefire in Gaza will be the instrument to remove the excuse of all non-state actors, whether in Lebanon, whether in Iraq, whether in Yemen or any other places (to stop fighting),” he explained.
Captives of ballistic diplomacy
The Middle Eastern non-state actors have become the de-facto pieces of the ballistic diplomacy of Tehran in its proxy war against Israel and the desire of Iran to stress-test the Iron Dome, the Israeli anti-missile defence system.
This might complicate things further, experts say.
“It’s very unlikely that Hezbollah will be pushed to reduce its launching of rockets into Israel. It’s more likely that we are going to see further escalation on this side,“ said Luigi Narbonne, on-leave EU ambassador to Saudi Arabia and other MENA countries and head of Mediterranean Studies at the LUISS University in Rome.
“It’s well known that Hezbollah has much larger capacities in terms of rockets and precision-guided missiles that may strike Israel and cause major damage and casualties amongst the (Israeli) population,” Narbone explained to Euronews.

Hezbollah members raise their group flags and chant slogans in Beirut, 25 September 2024 Hassan Ammar/Copyright 2024 The AP. All rights reserved
Meanwhile, Lebanese authorities are forced by the circumstances to find unsteady solutions to highly sensitive matters at home.
Since the end of the civil war in 1990 and the signing of the National Reconciliation Accords, aka the Taif Agreement, the Lebanese Council of Ministers has been a delicate composition of different parties involving the country’s main religious groups — Catholics and Orthodox Christians, Sunni and Shia Muslims, the Druze and other minorities — who fought against each other not so long ago.
Now, the country is preparing for the possibility of having to fight side-by-side against Israel’s boots on the ground — an issue that has raised a number of questions both at home and abroad.
“Will the Lebanese army defend its country? I think that it is the least that one can expect from a national army when that army’s country is being invaded. It is its duty, to defend its community, its citizens,” Abiad said.
Caught in the middle of it yet again
In 2006, when the Tsahal invaded Lebanon, the Lebanese regular army did not fight against the Israeli units because they did not receive any orders from Beirut. For the Lebanese government, it was all just a showdown between the IDF and Hezbollah’s militants.
“We know that there is a part of Lebanon that clearly does not like Hezbollah. However, the reaction of the Lebanese people will very much depend on the level of damages and the casualties that Israel will provoke with its military actions,” said Nardone.

Lebanese soldiers gather outside a damaged mobile shop after what is believed to be the result of a walkie-talkie exploding inside it, in the southern port city of Sidon, Leba AP Photo
After 2006’s Two Months War, the UN Resolution 1701 established that the Lebanese army had the role to defend the national borders and the obligation to disarm Hezbollah. Yet, since then, the Shia militia has only increased in size and firepower.
But as much as the current conflict is yet another Israel-Hezbollah bust-up, Lebanon is the one on the receiving end of it all.
“The 1701 resolution has also had infringements from Israel, who continues to occupy parts of Lebanon, and their warplanes continue to intrude into the airspace of Lebanon, and they continue to attack Lebanon,” the Lebanese minister of health said.
“The problem a lot of the times with Israel is that it only thinks that laws are made for the other countries.”
Wars, financial crisis and high-tech dystopia
Despite the relative lack of popularity of Hezbollah in Lebanon, in the end, the humanitarian crisis could bring the country together.
“Lebanon is already passing through multiple crises. We are in a deep financial crisis. We are hosting a large number of refugees, almost 1.5 million. One-third of our population. So, this war that has been ongoing for almost one year has really put a lot of stress on our system,” Abiad said.
The Lebanese population is strained and exhausted, which could bring unexpected outcomes.

People react during the funeral procession of their relatives, who were killed in Monday’s Israeli airstrikes, in the southern village of Saksakieh, 24 September 2024 AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari
“We have been witnessing mass displacement of people from the south. And obviously, the number of casualties, including civilians and children, will have an impact on the Lebanese people, which may also react as a nation and overcome the traditional divisions,” said Nardone.
Those living in Lebanon are still traumatised by last week’s dystopian exploding pager and walkie-talkie attacks, Abiad explained.
“It was a very big shock to the health system. Ever since the war started, we have been preparing our health care system, our hospitals, for the possibility of mass casualties.”
“But that attack was unprecedented because the weaponisation of the communication devices caused a large number of casualties. We are talking about 3,000 casualties in a matter of minutes,” he said.
Will regional actors step in to prevent a disaster?
Finally, the Lebanese question might find its solution through the involvement of other major actors in the region. Are the political conditions there?
“We have respected and accepted the call of the US, the G7 and the rest of the leading countries like Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, UAE and others. We have complied with all of this, with the consensus among all the stakeholders of the region,” Abias said.
Saudi Arabia has a major role in Lebanon, especially after the Abraham Accords and the downfall of Syria and its leader, Bashar al-Assad.
“It’s no secret that the Saudi (government) views Hezbollah as a force that would need to be dismantled or at least reduced in power,” Nardone said.
“In the past, they tried politically to use their influence within the Lebanese political arena to get these results. And so far, unsuccessfully. And, of course, at the moment they would rather not take actions that may entail a risk of being drawn into the conflict,” he concluded.
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Nollywood Actress, Angela Okorie Allegedly Re-Arrested Over Alleged Refusal To Pay Lawyer Who Secured Her Bail (Video)
Angela Okorie, the Nigerian actress, has reportedly been re-arrested over allegations that she refused to pay the lawyer who secured her bail from Suleja Prison.
Angela was re-arrested at the Suleja prison on Tuesday, immediately she was released on bail.
This came less than an hour after actor Stanley Ontop raised the alarm over an alleged plan to re-arrest the actress after release on Tuesday.
Speaking in a video on Instagram, actress Doris Ogala who said she is already on her way to the police station, stated that the actress was re-arrested by an unnamed Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, for refusing to pay the N5 million agreed fee to secure her bail.
Doris said; “You see, one thing is for someone to cut their clothes according to their size. Angela has been arrested again. As a matter of fact, I’m going to the police station now. You see, when Angela was arrested by Mercy, she called a friend of her or village person. I don’t know how they relate. To help her get a SAN.
“And the SAN charged them N5 million. I think the SAN was the one who even facilitated the bail and all that. Now when Angela knew that they have granted her bail according to the lady, Angela started saying that she didn’t ask her to get a SAN and she wasn’t going to pay the money, and meanwhile this lady has deposited.”
Recall that Angela, who was granted bail on Friday after her arrest by Mercy Johnson over alleged defamation, regained her freedom few minutes ago after perfecting her bail conditions.
Watch Doris Ogala speak

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I Can Decide To Revoke The Land Allocated To Onitsha Main Market And Build A School On It” — Gov Soludo
Governor Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra State has warned that he has the power to revoke the land allocated to Onitsha Main Market and use it for public purposes, including building a school. According to Soludo, this action would be taken in the interest of the public and is backed by the Land Use Act.
The governor made this statement during a meeting with leaders of the Anambra State Markets Amalgamated Traders Association (ASMATA), emphasizing that the law empowers him to revoke market lands across the state for overriding public interest.
Soludo stated that the government could compensate original landowners and that affected parties could challenge the compensation amount in court, but not the revocation itself.
The governor’s warning comes amid tensions between the state government and market traders, with Soludo insisting on reopening the market despite a sit-at-home order imposed by the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB).
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IPOB Declares South-East Shutdown On Monday Over Onitsha Market Closure, Demands Nnamdi Kanu’s Release
The group insisted that the sit-at-home was a peaceful form of civil disobedience and denied claims that it amounted to economic sabotage or criminality.
The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has announced a Biafra-wide solidarity lockdown scheduled for Monday, February 2, across the South-East, in protest against the closure of the Onitsha Main Market and to demand the immediate release of its leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.
In a statement issued on Friday by its Media and Publicity Secretary, Emma Powerful, IPOB said the planned shutdown of economic and public activities in the region was a voluntary act of solidarity with traders in Onitsha, following the Anambra State government’s decision to shut the main market for one week.
The group also blasted Governor Chukwuma Soludo for threatening for further closures, revocation of land allocations, demolitions, and other sanctions against traders.
IPOB described the market closure as “economic warfare” against the people of the region, alleging that the action was intended to suppress continued observance of the Monday sit-at-home protest demanding Kanu’s release.
The group insisted that the sit-at-home was a peaceful form of civil disobedience and denied claims that it amounted to economic sabotage or criminality.
According to the statement, the solidarity lockdown is not an enforcement action but a collective response by residents angered by what IPOB called punitive measures against traders whose livelihoods depend on the Onitsha Main Market, widely regarded as one of the largest markets in Africa.
The group called on traders, transport operators, banks, schools, civil servants, and other sectors across Anambra, Abia, Imo, Enugu, Ebonyi, and other parts of the former Eastern Region to remain indoors and suspend activities on the day of the protest.
IPOB reiterated its commitment to non-violence and urged supporters to remain law-abiding and avoid confrontations.
The group warned against what it described as possible “false flag operations” aimed at discrediting its cause.
It maintained that its agitation is focused on dialogue and a referendum on Biafran self-determination.
The group further accused the Anambra State governor of acting against the interests of traders and residents, insisting that any action against Onitsha traders amounted to an attack on all Biafrans.
Governor Soludo on Monday announced the temporary closure of the Onitsha Main Market for one week over traders’ continued observance of the Monday sit-at-home earlier ordered by IPOB.
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