Naharnet

Away from home, Israeli evacuees wait as Hezbollah tensions spike

Yarden Gil opens a reinforced metal door to enter the northern Israeli kindergarten where she works, which doubles as an underground shelter against rockets fired by Lebanon's Hezbollah.

She is among tens of thousands displaced from the border area by the ever-present threat of Hezbollah attacks and, increasingly, the fear of an all-out war.

Gil, 36, and her family have left their home in Yiftah, a kibbutz community just a few hundred meters from the Lebanese border. She said there they lived so close to the border that they could often hear incoming rockets before the sirens started wailing.

They now live in a single room in a hotel 50 kilometers to the south, near the city of Tiberias on the shores of the lake known as the Sea of Galilee.

"We really don't have independence here," said Gil, charging that the Israeli government is "not doing enough for us to be able to go back to our home and be secure".

Dozens of northern Israeli communities have been rendered ghost towns as the Israeli military and Hezbollah have traded near-daily cross-border fire, ending a period of relative calm since a 2006 war.

The spike in violence during the ongoing Gaza conflict has re-ignited fears of a wider war between long-term foes Israel and Hezbollah, a Hamas ally.

The border clashes have killed at least 93 civilians in Lebanon and nearly 390 others, mostly fighters, according to an AFP tally.

Eleven civilians and 15 soldiers have been killed on the Israeli side, according to the military.

- Constant 'instability' -

Israel said early last week it had approved military plans for an offensive in southern Lebanon. Hezbollah's leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah responded with a warning that nowhere in Israel would be safe in the event of war.

With Israel focused on the Gaza war after Hamas's surprise October 7 attack, a return home is all that is on the minds of evacuees from northern communities languishing in hotels turned state-funded shelters, away from home.

The authorities have repeatedly extended accommodation arrangements, which are now set to expire in August.

Some evacuees have moved out of the hotels, to elsewhere in Israel or abroad.

"That's our new reality: instability," said Iris Amsalem, a 33-year-old mother of two from the border community of Shomera who is now staying in a Galilee hotel.

"We want peace. We want security."

Only a few Israelis have remained on the border, defended by civilian units and military forces.

Deborah Fredericks, an 80-year-old retiree staying at a five-star hotel with hundreds of other evacuees, played the tile-based game of Rummikub next to a gleaming pool and palm trees in front of the lake.

"It's really funny because I'm in the middle of a war but I'm on holiday," she said.

"I want to go back, but it won't be for a while. It'll be when they say I can. You can't do anything about it."

- 'War must happen' -

Others feel they have been abandoned by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government as it prioritizes the Gaza war.

"No one communicates with us, no one! No one came to see us!" said Lili Dahn, a resident of the border town of Kiryat Shmona, in her 60s.

Gil, the kindergarten teacher, said parents had to set up their own schooling for their children after they fled their kibbutz, which has suffered damage from rockets and in fires caused by the strikes.

"The government is responsible for our security and I expect them to be more interested in what happened to us," she said, adding that some of her fellow kibbutzniks have moved as far away as Canada and Thailand.

Netanyahu has pledged to return security, and civilians, to the north.

Some evacuees said they believe a war against Hezbollah is only a matter of time.

Sarit Zehavi, a former Israeli army intelligence official who lives near the border, said her greatest fear was that a potential ceasefire would allow Hezbollah "to preserve its capabilities and launch the next massacre", like Hamas did.

Gil's husband, Ewdward, 39, also said he feared a similar assault to the October 7 attack on southern Israel.

"It happened in the south," he said. "Who's telling me that now it won't happen in the north?"

Source: Agence France Presse


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