Janne Raevuori
Opinion: Disarming the terrorist organization Hezbollah, ending the war and beginning peace talks with Israel is the only way to save Lebanon
Today, as we go in the morning to our daytime work, and our children go to their schools, and universities, today as we eat happily our lunch, and gather around our kitchen table to dine, sit on our living room sofa, or go for our shopping or exercise, and finally we go sleep peacefully in the comfort warm homes in Lahti and our whole beautiful peaceful secure country. We might remember that about thousands of miles away in the Middle East, in Lebanon, in Gaza, in Israel, and the region – tens of thousands of people living in real-life destructive “regional” war and experiencing hell-like life conditions, running away from their homes, and villages and towns leaving everything, scrambling for finding a safe shelter, searching for a small meal to survive the day, for a piece of blanket to warm up. In my peaceful home in Lahti, I struggle myself – as a Lebanese native who made beautiful Finland is home – for my people’s struggle, my heart is aching for their pain. I sat beside my wife and our kids to explain to them what was happening in my first homeland Lebanon and to answer their questions about why the ugly war and big events were unfolding and why Israel would act with such cruelty toward a part of the Lebanese, as Israeli airstrikes intensify in Lebanon, killing thousands of civilians and forcing millions to leave their homes and towns.
Amid dozens of Israeli airstrikes every day, and a ground invasion in Lebanon, around 1 million people across the country have been displaced. In many villages and towns in northern Lebanon, thousands of Lebanese citizens majority of them belonging to the Shia community fleeing the ongoing war, have taken up shelter in Christian churches and monasteries.
The moment I arrived in Beirut, Israel launched a number of powerful strikes in residential areas of the southern suburbs minutes after issuing an evacuation order giving people no time to leave. pic.twitter.com/bA9xyCbedw
— Steve Sweeney (@SweeneySteve) October 3, 2024
Missiles and bombs rain down on the skies everywhere, destroying everything and killing hundreds of innocents every single day. There is great pain and suffering after all, and the Israeli army is continuing its current operations in southern Lebanon and targeting Hezbollah in Beirut, North, and Bekaa. In all of Lebanon where Hezbollah groups are hiding. It doesn’t seem that There is going to be a ceasefire in Lebanon any soon. Israel cannot afford now to not finish the job and completely dismantle, and disarm the militia and its arsenal.
In the short term, Israel’s strikes are destroying dozens of towns and cities in Lebanon but all hope amidst the chaos of a future in Lebanon without war, without Hezbollah.
Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Hezbollah, was killed in an Israeli airstrike on 27th September.
But after the killing of Hassan Nasrallah, the secretary general of Hezbollah, and at least 40 top commanders eliminated in just two weeks, Most Lebanese are painfully and fearfully looking for a small light at the end of the tunnel. They strive each morning after a long night of bombardment, to be back to regular life, and to be able to go shopping and to prepare for their day, despite experiencing the terror of war. The majority of them are shouting for peace and calling to disarm Hezbollah. The international community must begin implementing the UN resolutions 1559 and 1701 immediately. It is time to stand behind the peace-seeking minorities of Lebanon and everyone in Lebanon and beyond and support them to accomplish a long-lasting peace solution.
Unity and cooperation among the Lebanese people from different religious sects and groups are essential to addressing the core issues that matter most: to achieve peace and implement Resolution 1701. One of the urgent issues that should be addressed, is that to elect a new president of the Lebanese state and to form a new cabinet which on its top priority list is to declare Lebanon a neutral state and begin diplomatic negotiation and peace deals with Israel. Ending the war and beginning peace talks with Israel is the only way that will save Lebanon right now from total distraction and collapse.
Georges Hourani, an accredited professional journalist and married father of three, is currently studying at Salpaus, sales and digital marketing, and doing training work at the communication office at the Lahti Parish Union. He is the author of "Homecoming From War Zones" book.
Hourani was born in Beirut and moved at the age of two when his parents and siblings escaped to the south of Lebanon because of the civil war and relocated to the town of Marjeyoun (130 km away from Beirut) not far from the Northern Israeli borders. He is an award-winning foreign reporter and journalist, news and feature writer who worked early in his career as a war correspondent for An-Nahar a leading Arabic newspaper published in Lebanon, just after graduating from the Lebanese University in Beirut, with a BA majoring in journalism. He continued further his education at the University of Helsinki where he took on a master’s degree level courses in media and global communication, foreign reporting, and international law. His hobbies are cooking, reading, cycling, swimming, and walking in the Finnish woods.