Lebanon army says it has taken control of south

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UN peacekeepers patrol in vehicles together with Lebanese soldiers near the border with Israel in southern Lebanon on Thursday. (AFP)
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People look through the rubble of a destroyed building that was hit by an Israeli airstrike at a commercial district in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, on Tuesday. (AP)
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Updated 08 January 2026
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Lebanon army says it has taken control of south

  • Israel says Beirut's efforts to disarm Hezbollah fighters are insufficient
  • Army had set a deadline to clear non-state weaponry from near the Israeli border by end of 2025

BEIRUT/JERUSALEM: The Lebanese army said on Thursday it had taken operational control in ​the south of the country, but Israel said efforts to disarm Hezbollah fighters were insufficient, raising pressure on Lebanese leaders who fear Israel could escalate strikes.
Lebanon has been seeking to place all arms under state control, in line with a November 2024 US-brokered ceasefire that ended war between Israel and the Iran-backed Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah. Israel says the truce requires the complete disarmament of Hezbollah, which was badly weakened by its strikes.
The army had set a deadline to clear non-state weaponry from the southern area near the Israeli border by the end of 2025, before moving on to other areas of the country.
It said on Thursday it had achieved that initial goal, securing areas south of the Litani River, excluding positions still held by Israeli ‌forces, though there ‌was more work to be done clearing unexploded ordnance and tunnels.

Hezbollah trying to rearm

Israeli Prime ‌Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the efforts by Lebanon’s government and army were “an encouraging beginning.”
But it added: “They are far from sufficient, as evidenced by Hezbollah’s efforts to rearm and rebuild its terror infrastructure with Iranian support.”
Hezbollah’s disarmament was “imperative for Israel’s security and Lebanon’s future,” it said.
Israel has been conducting near-daily strikes in the south and sometimes more widely in Lebanon, accusing Hezbollah of trying to reestablish infrastructure, and Beirut of failing to uphold the ceasefire.
In a written statement on Thursday, Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc said Lebanon had fulfilled its obligations under the ceasefire deal. It said Lebanon’s government should avoid making concessions to Israel and “exert all possible pressure” to compel Israel to halt attacks and withdraw ⁠troops.
So far, Hezbollah has not obstructed the Lebanese army’s clearing operations in southern Lebanon. But the group refuses to disarm in full and says the agreement does ‌not apply to the rest of Lebanon.

'Decisions of war and peace'

Lebanon’s cabinet said the army must continue working on ‍a state monopoly on arms in the rest of the country “as quickly as possible.” The army had previously proposed a ‍phased plan in which it would clear unauthorized weapons caches region by region, moving north and east through the country.
The cabinet said the army commander would brief the cabinet in February on his plan for clearing the next region — a swathe of territory that lies between the Litani River and Beirut.
President Joseph Aoun said that the army deployment in the south aimed to affirm the principle that “decisions of war and peace” ​belonged to the state alone, and “to prevent the use of Lebanese territory as a starting point for any hostile acts.”
He said lasting stability would depend on addressing issues including the presence of Israeli troops.
Hezbollah ⁠has fought numerous conflicts with Israel since it was founded by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards in 1982. It kept its arms after the end of Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, using them against Israeli troops who occupied the south until 2000.
The Lebanese military, which receives US support, has stayed out of conflicts between Hezbollah and Israel.

UN welcomes army control

UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert said it was “great to see” the army had “assumed operational control south of the Litani.”
“This is undeniable progress. Hard work lies ahead,” she wrote on X.
A Lebanese security source told Reuters that the army’s statement signalled that no group would be able to launch attacks from southern Lebanon.
Hezbollah opened fire in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas at the start of the Gaza war in 2023, and traded fire across the border until Israel went on the offensive in 2024, killing the group’s leaders and destroying much of its arsenal.
In a statement, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a Hezbollah ally, affirmed support for the army and “its achievements which would have been nearly complete ‌were it not for Israel’s occupation of numerous locations and its daily violations.” 


Slain son of former Libya ruler Qaddafi to be buried near capital

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Slain son of former Libya ruler Qaddafi to be buried near capital

TRIPOLI: The slain son of former Libyan ruler Muammar Qaddafi will be buried in a town south of the capital that remains loyal to the family, relatives said Thursday.
Seif Al-Islam Qaddafi, once seen by some as Libya’s heir apparent, was shot dead on Tuesday in the northwestern city of Zintan.
The burial will be held on Friday in the town of Bani Walid some 175 kilometers south of Tripoli, two of his brothers said.
“The date and location of his burial have been decided by mutual agreement among the family,” half-brother Mohamed Qaddafi said in a Facebook post.
Mohamed said the plan reflected “our respect” for the town, which has remained loyal to the elder Qaddafi years after he was toppled and killed in the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings.
Each year, the town of about 100,000 celebrates the anniversary of a 1969 coup that brought Muammar to power, parading through the streets holding the ex-leader’s portrait.
Saadi Qaddafi, a younger brother, said his dead sibling will be “buried among the Werfalla,” an influential local tribe, in a grave next to his brother Khamis Qaddafi, who died during the 2011 unrest.
Marcel Ceccaldi, a French lawyer who had been representing Seif Al-Islam, told AFP he was killed by an unidentified “four-man commando” who stormed his house on Tuesday.
Seif Al-Islam had long been widely seen as his father’s heir. Under the elder Qaddafi’s iron-fisted 40-year rule, he was described as the de facto prime minister, cultivating an image of moderation and reform despite holding no official position.
But that reputation soon collapsed when he promised “rivers of blood” in retaliation for the 2011 uprising.
He was arrested that year on a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity, and a Tripoli court later sentenced him to death, although he was later granted amnesty.
In 2021 he announced he would run for president but the elections were indefinitely postponed.
He is survived by four out of six siblings: Mohamed, Saadi, Aicha and Hannibal, who was recently released from a Lebanese prison on bail.
Libya has struggled to recover from chaos that erupted after the 2011 uprising. It remains split between a UN-backed government based in Tripoli and an eastern administration backed by Khalifa Haftar.