🔴This is a long one. As Lebanese authorities are holding a new round of negotiations with the Israelis in Rome to discuss Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon, the Israeli army continues to terrorize the area with drone strikes and bombings.
Right before we started filming, there was a drone strike in front of us that injured two men.
The Israeli army is not going anywhere. This occupation of South Lebanon has been planned for decades. Don’t let the ‘negotiations’ fool you.
@cbonneauimages is one a of a small coterie of journalists on the ground reporting and recording the Israeli onslaught on Lebanon. This is what real journalism looks like.
Israel is illegally expanding, occupying land in Palestine & Lebanon, building permanent structures without resistance from the International community, unreported by Western media. If it wasn't for brave journalists the world wouldn't know. Thank you @cbonneauimages in #Lebanon
The work that @cbonneauimages is doing is astonishing.
Everyone should be following her and keeping track of all the evidence of “israeli” crimes she has been relentlessly documenting.
@xIsraelExposedx, @archivegenocide, everyone.
Watch, follow, share, spread the word.
⭕️ Israeli ceasefire violations continue across south Lebanon with shelling, a drone attack, and home demolitions
An Israeli drone dropped an incendiary bomb on Al-Tahra hill in the town of Kfar Reman in the district of Nabatieh on Monday, while intermittent Israeli artillery shelling targeted the area between Nabatieh al-Fawqa and Kfartebnit, according to the state’s National News Agency (NNA).
In Marjayoun, the Israeli army demolished and burned homes in the southern neighbourhoods of the border town of Hadatha.
🎥 More details from @cbonneauimages below ⬇️
Courtney Bonneau heeft in Libanon veel door Israël veroorzaakt leed en vernietiging gezien. Bij de aanblik van de totale verwoesting van de stad Khiam werd zij tijdelijk sprakeloos.
Genocide. Domicide. Urbicide. Ecocide.
I’m running out of words to describe the devastation of the town of Khiam, which is inside the illegal Israeli ‘security zone’ in southern Lebanon. The Israeli army has razed the entire town to the ground and destroyed the 100 year old Khiam detention center, placing an illegal military base on the ruins of it.
Very important reporting on Zionist terrorism in Lebanon
Around 4,500 killed
Around 12,000 injured
Continued Israeli terrorist expansion on Lebanese land
Joseph Aoun & Nawaf Salam, the CIA/Mossad terrorists have allowed this. Disgusting
Meanwhile as the UK moves to proscribe the IRGC as a ‘terrorist organization’ — Israel/IDF is casually going about its business in destroying homes, residential areas, killing innocent human beings by any means i.e. bombing, sniping, drones, burning etc all the Israeli specials.
As always, the courageous Courtney reports from al Khiam. 🇱🇧
🎥 Journalist Courtney Bonneau, who has documented Israel’s military occupation of southern Lebanon for the past 15 months, reports that the number of Israeli military positions on Lebanese territory has grown from 5 permanent bases before the war (or 7, including two sniper forts in Kfar Kila) to 23 illegal bases since the the March 2 escalation.
Genocide is defined under Article II of the 1948 UN Genocide Convention as any act committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group. One of the five acts is “deliberately imposing destructive life conditions.”
Look at these photos of what is left of Khiam and Debbine. Remember that more than 65 towns and villages in Lebanon are still under Israeli occupation and are still undergoing daily illegal civilian home and infrastructure demolition.
These are acts of genocide.
From Courtney Bonneau, whose reporting from Lebanon has been essential:
‘This week brought another loss, one I had neither anticipated nor prepared myself to absorb. Its force has surprised me. Maybe grief does not become easier through repetition. Maybe each loss discovers a new vulnerability. For the next few days, I will step away from the field. Not because the work has become less necessary, but because mourning, too, demands its own uncompromising attention. My heart is in pieces.’