Zürcher Nachrichten - Hezbollah supporters defiant after sons killed fighting Israel

EUR -
AED 4.304794
AFN 74.416045
ALL 95.267221
AMD 436.415531
ANG 2.097677
AOA 1075.861669
ARS 1614.412733
AUD 1.636899
AWG 2.109532
AZN 1.997094
BAM 1.95145
BBD 2.361645
BDT 143.869894
BGN 1.954953
BHD 0.442097
BIF 3486.712423
BMD 1.171962
BND 1.492467
BOB 8.101904
BRL 5.837897
BSD 1.172491
BTN 109.919495
BWP 15.764789
BYN 3.299032
BYR 22970.463439
BZD 2.358233
CAD 1.601485
CDF 2708.404885
CHF 0.917957
CLF 0.026551
CLP 1044.909833
CNY 7.99841
CNH 8.004036
COP 4197.055259
CRC 534.206848
CUC 1.171962
CUP 31.057004
CVE 110.636119
CZK 24.346641
DJF 208.793659
DKK 7.472878
DOP 69.907553
DZD 155.223996
EGP 60.997008
ERN 17.579436
ETB 184.566271
FJD 2.57187
FKP 0.867439
GBP 0.867961
GEL 3.152836
GGP 0.867439
GHS 12.985175
GIP 0.867439
GMD 85.553233
GNF 10286.900041
GTQ 8.961983
GYD 245.332051
HKD 9.179806
HNL 31.151556
HRK 7.532154
HTG 153.487186
HUF 364.496697
IDR 20182.364841
ILS 3.515243
IMP 0.867439
INR 109.881263
IQD 1535.96941
IRR 1548162.3571
ISK 143.798996
JEP 0.867439
JMD 185.746719
JOD 0.830905
JPY 186.799528
KES 151.358729
KGS 102.461627
KHR 4693.517023
KMF 492.224246
KPW 1054.754756
KRW 1733.642948
KWD 0.361293
KYD 0.977118
KZT 543.316502
LAK 25869.22106
LBP 105000.181954
LKR 372.587825
LRD 215.748126
LSL 19.274351
LTL 3.4605
LVL 0.708908
LYD 7.414503
MAD 10.826711
MDL 20.08514
MGA 4863.138174
MKD 61.587059
MMK 2460.732202
MNT 4193.887733
MOP 9.458674
MRU 46.807854
MUR 54.51977
MVR 18.118898
MWK 2032.759828
MXN 20.301847
MYR 4.632186
MZN 74.893949
NAD 19.274351
NGN 1580.555227
NIO 43.153616
NOK 10.895612
NPR 175.871191
NZD 1.983341
OMR 0.450597
PAB 1.172581
PEN 4.0295
PGK 5.157525
PHP 70.550954
PKR 326.87233
PLN 4.24449
PYG 7375.589545
QAR 4.274988
RON 5.093114
RSD 117.343939
RUB 88.003871
RWF 1713.373179
SAR 4.395584
SBD 9.421139
SCR 16.425386
SDG 703.177629
SEK 10.775087
SGD 1.493947
SHP 0.874988
SLE 28.833685
SLL 24575.461481
SOS 670.103323
SRD 43.899388
STD 24257.255919
STN 24.445609
SVC 10.260171
SYP 129.655959
SZL 19.266967
THB 37.807331
TJS 11.039344
TMT 4.107728
TND 3.409414
TOP 2.821804
TRY 52.650298
TTD 7.949245
TWD 36.899256
TZS 3052.962446
UAH 51.445635
UGX 4344.333993
USD 1.171962
UYU 46.61628
UZS 14221.357925
VES 563.768743
VND 30848.98081
VUV 138.229427
WST 3.177755
XAF 654.495184
XAG 0.015024
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.167287
XCG 2.11318
XDR 0.813532
XOF 654.500756
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.659558
ZAR 19.289482
ZMK 10549.066135
ZMW 22.307177
ZWL 377.371421
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0750

    22.735

    +0.33%

  • GSK

    -0.2350

    55.885

    -0.42%

  • NGG

    1.7800

    86.05

    +2.07%

  • BTI

    1.2400

    56.07

    +2.21%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    23.1

    +0.26%

  • AZN

    -0.0300

    195.75

    -0.02%

  • RIO

    2.7300

    100.45

    +2.72%

  • BCE

    -0.0150

    23.885

    -0.06%

  • RYCEF

    -1.3100

    15.85

    -8.26%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.06

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    -0.0800

    82.37

    -0.1%

  • RELX

    -0.0900

    36.98

    -0.24%

  • VOD

    0.1550

    15.345

    +1.01%

  • BP

    0.4750

    46.385

    +1.02%

Hezbollah supporters defiant after sons killed fighting Israel
Hezbollah supporters defiant after sons killed fighting Israel / Photo: Anwar AMRO - AFP

Hezbollah supporters defiant after sons killed fighting Israel

Lebanese town official Sharif Badreddine begged his youngest son not to leave to fight for Hezbollah against Israel in the country's south, but as the tearful father buried his child he could not hide a sense of pride.

Text size:

In the face of a government push to disarm the movement, its supporters call on a long-held enmity with Israel, deep religious beliefs and backing from Iran to justify their sons' sacrifice in the group's latest war that has killed thousands in Lebanon.

"Before he left, I told him, 'Don't go, the situation is bad,'" Badreddine, 67, told AFP.

But his son Ahmad, who was in his twenties with two children, insisted, leaving his father no choice but to accept his death as a necessary sacrifice for his homeland, where Israel has launched several invasions since the 1970s.

"I am proud of him. He was martyred on the front lines. This is an honour for me," said the grieving father, who last saw his son six weeks ago.

"He was defending me, all of southern Lebanon, and all of Lebanon."

As the father buried his son alongside 13 others, including two rescuers, in southern Lebanon's Kfar Sir, a 10-day truce agreed between Israel and Lebanon that began on Friday had brought some calm to the area.

Israel conducted huge strikes across Lebanon, including Kfar Sir, and invaded the south after Hezbollah entered the Middle East war in support of its backer Iran on March 2, killing more than 2,400 people according to Lebanese authorities.

The ceasefire allowed displaced residents of the town, which sits 15 kilometres (nine miles) north of Israel's border, to return and mourn the 14 men, some killed in Israeli strikes and others in clashes with invading troops.

"These young men did us proud. They forced the Israelis to retreat. The Israelis were unable to achieve their goals," said father-of-five Badreddine, one of the few who remained in the town.

If his other son decided to fight, he said he would hold his head "high thanks to him too".

- 'The last inch' -

Faces in the crowd were filled with gloom and sadness as mourners waited for the Hezbollah-organised ceremony to begin.

The men's pictures were hung around the town, and when their coffins draped in Hezbollah's yellow flags reached its square, women in black ululated, wept and threw roses and rice from balconies.

Amena al-Shami stood looking at her son Hassain Sheaito's coffin, weeping while women hugged her.

"He defended our pride, our dignity, and our honour. He sacrificed himself and offered himself up on the border," she said while holding up his picture.

"I still have two young men to offer as well."

The scene showed the entrenched support of Hezbollah that remains in southern towns despite the government banning the group's military activities at the beginning of March, shortly after the start of the war.

Hezbollah has not officially mourned the fighters it lost in more than six weeks of war, but mass funerals have been held by relatives in southern towns like Kfar Sir.

The truce came after unprecedented direct talks between Lebanon and Israel in Washington ahead of future negotiations, which Hezbollah and its supporters are strongly opposed to.

Shami called the talks "cowardice" and said the group's fighters remained unbowed despite being squeezed by the government and Israel.

"We will continue on this path to liberate the last inch of Lebanon," she said.

- 'Honoured' -

Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah told AFP on Monday that thousands of young men are "demanding to join the ranks" of the group to fight Israel's invasion, indicative of the fierce belief among its supporters.

Following the ceasefire, the Israeli army said it had established a "yellow line" in southern Lebanon.

It encompasses dozens of villages and is reminiscent of Israel's occupation of a 20-kilometre-deep strip of land along the border until 2000.

Hezbollah has vowed to break the line through "resistance".

Sitting on a chair in Kfar Sir's square, teary-eyed Haydar Sbeiti, 68, talks about his engineer son, Mahmoud, killed by Israel in the war.

"We have been on this path for a long time," he said. "He chose this path from a young age, and I encouraged him. I am honoured to be the father of a martyr."

He said he had three other sons who were defiant and ready to join the fight against Israel.

"We are all ready to sacrifice ourselves for Lebanon, its people, and the resistance."

W.Vogt--NZN