Unveiling the Untold Stories: Lebanese Nationals in Israeli Custody

Unveiling the Untold Stories: Lebanese Nationals in Israeli Custody

Since 2024, the Israeli army has reportedly abducted dozens of Lebanese citizens, a situation that continues to evolve, leaving many families in anguish over the uncertainty surrounding their loved ones. The ongoing crisis underscores the urgent need for intervention and accountability.

As the Israeli military’s operations persist, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has been systematically denied access to these detainees. This situation not only prevents the delivery of critical messages from families but also violates numerous tenets of international humanitarian law.

The list of abducted individuals is alarming, encompassing both civilians and prisoners of war who all deserve protection and humane treatment. The stories of the missing are harrowing:

  • Ali Nasser Younes and his uncle Fouad Habib Qataya were seized while on their way to a workshop in Wadi Al-Hujayr.
  • Hussein Amin Karki was tragically shot in the back as he witnessed the murder of his mother.
  • Hassan Ahmad Hamoud was taken at dawn while his home in Taybeh was set ablaze.
  • Various individuals, including students, fishermen, municipal employees, and paramedics, are also among those missing.

The conditions faced by these Lebanese citizens in captivity are horrendous. They are effectively cut off from the outside world:

  • Neutral observers and the ICRC are barred from providing any oversight.
  • Lawyers and family members are entirely disconnected from the detainees.

Survivors of captivity have shared accounts of extreme physical and psychological abuse, including:

  • Severe beatings
  • Humiliating strip searches
  • Starvation and denial of basic needs like water and medical care
  • Isolation and threats
  • Collective punishment aimed at prisoners’ families

International law clearly delineates the rights of detainees, yet these laws are blatantly disregarded:

  • The Third Geneva Convention and its Additional Protocols prohibit torture and ensure humane treatment.
  • The Fourth Geneva Convention forbids the kidnapping of civilians and arbitrary detention.
  • Article 8 of the Rome Statute classifies such acts as war crimes.
  • Additionally, Rule 96 of the ICRC explicitly bans hostage-taking in all conflicts.

In Lebanon, no security apparatus keeps track of detainees, and no governmental body documents their names. This lack of accountability allows the Israeli military to operate with impunity, further exacerbating the crisis.

The cabinet led by Nawaf Salam has remained largely inactive, opting for condemnations and empty statements rather than taking meaningful action. This pattern can be seen as deliberate negligence, masquerading as governance.

Each moment that passes without action deepens the national humiliation, turning Lebanon’s children into pawns in a larger geopolitical game. The historical context reveals that UN resolutions and diplomatic efforts have failed to secure the release of Lebanese prisoners, with freedom often only achieved through armed resistance.

Every day that Salam’s cabinet remains inactive constitutes a profound betrayal of the Lebanese people. The kidnapped individuals stand as living testimonies to the government’s chronic incompetence and lack of action.

Families are left to scavenge for any information they can find, relying on released Palestinian prisoners or fragmented social media updates. Mothers who learn their sons are alive in places like Ofer, Ramleh, or Nafha find themselves without a government to turn to, only receiving empty promises in return.

The cabinet must make a critical choice: either reclaim responsibility or continue to be passive observers of their citizens’ suffering. Until the state actively asserts itself—through legal, diplomatic, and media channels—the kidnapped will remain hostages, not just of the enemy, but of a government that shamefully abandons them in their most vulnerable moments.

Numerous remedies could be pursued but remain glaringly overlooked. These include:

  • Formally requesting ICRC access to the detainees.
  • Meticulously documenting each kidnapping incident.
  • Submitting formal complaints to the UN Security Council and Human Rights Council.
  • Launching global awareness campaigns.
  • Filing cases with the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court.
  • Holding emergency parliamentary and cabinet sessions to develop a coherent national strategy.

The adversary respects only unyielding strength; petitions, resolutions, and political correctness hold no sway. The liberation of Lebanese prisoners requires audacious courage, unwavering clarity, and an assertive expression of national will. Anything less is a profound betrayal of those who suffer in silence.

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