Israelâs invasion of southern Lebanon devastates centuries of history
From Phoenician temples to Crusader castles, heritage sites bear the brunt of Israelâs expanding military offensive. Lebanonâs landscape is layered with thousands of years of
From Phoenician temples to Crusader castles, heritage sites bear the brunt of Israelâs expanding military offensive. Lebanonâs landscape is layered with thousands of years of history, but many of its most treasured archaeological and cultural sites now lie in the path of Israelâs expanding military offensive. Despite a so-called ceasefire, on Saturday, Israeli forces captured Beaufort Castle, a 900-year-old fortress located on a rocky hilltop near the city of Nabatieh, one of the largest cities in southern Lebanon. The capture followed days of fierce fighting and forms part of Israelâs deepest military incursion into Lebanon in 26 years. Israeli troops have crossed north of the Litani River and advanced towards the Zahrani River. Lebanonâs World Heritage Sites Lebanon currently has six UNESCO World Heritage Sites. UNESCO World Heritage Sites are landmarks or areas judged to have exceptional cultural or natural importance to humanity and are designated for international protection and preservation. Lebanonâs Culture Minister Ghassan Salame told the AFP news agency that Israeli attacks on the countryâs south are putting heritage sites, including in the ancient city of Tyre, in âserious dangerâ. Tyre, located some 83km (52 miles) south of Beirut, contains the remains of one of the most important cities of the ancient Phoenician world, including extensive Roman-era ruins and one of the largest hippodromes of the Roman Empire. Israeli forced displacement orders and bombardments have pushed tens of thousands of people to flee Tyre, with some estimates putting displacement from the city and surrounding area at about 200,000.
Across Lebanon, the wider war has uprooted more than one million people. Dated to the third millennium BC, Tyre grew into one of the Mediterraneanâs leading maritime powers. After Alexander the Greatâs siege in 332 BC linked the island city to the mainland, Tyre flourished under Greek, Roman and Byzantine rule before gradually declining in the centuries after the Crusades. âBombings fell very close to the ruins of Tyre,â Minister Salame said, adding that the medieval Beaufort Castle overlooking Nabatieh was âdirectly hitâ. UNESCO enhanced protection Lebanon is home to at least 39 cultural sites that have been granted provisional enhanced protection. Several of them are in the south, in areas affected by the ongoing Israeli military operations. The designation provides the highest level of legal protection for cultural heritage under international law, with any noncompliance constituting a serious breach of the 1954 Hague Convention and its 1999 Second Protocol and potentially giving rise to criminal responsibility. In a news release on April 1, Lazare Eloundou Assomo, the assistant director-general for culture at UNESCO, emphasised the protection of cultural heritage and how it serves as a backbone of peopleâs identity. âWhen heritage is destroyed anywhere, moral standards are undermined, social cohesion is eroded, and trust and resilience are jeopardised,â he stated. Some of the most notable protected sites include Beaufort Castle Known in Arabic as Qalaat al-Shaqif, the 12th-century Crusader fortress is perched 700 metres (2,300ft) above southern Lebanon.
