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Bachelor in Internazional Management Tag de Rouven Tur de hello and welcome to NewsHour from the BBC World Service.
We're coming to you live from London.
I'm James Menendez and our big story today is the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah that came into force in the early hours of this morning.
As is often the way with these truces, there was a significant uptick in violence just before it began, but so far it does seem to be holding.
It follows more than 13 months of fighting between Israel and the Iran backed militia that began the day after the hamas attacks of October 7 that prompted tens of thousands of people to flee their homes on both sides of the border and thousands to die, particularly in the past two months when Israel began its bombardment of Hezbollah positions and sent in troops across the border.
Well, under the agreement, Those troops have 60 days to head back into Israel.
Hezbollah also has to move its fighters and weapons about 30 kilometres north of the border to the other side of the Litany river in southern Lebanon.
And it'll be up to the Lebanese army, the UN force that was monitoring the last truce back in 2006, as well as the US and France to make sure it sticks.
Well, Niza has been hearing from two people displaced by the past year of fighting.
Sara Ramal is a content creator on Instagram.
She was displaced from her Lebanese village right on the border with Israel.
What does she think of the ceasefire?
I don't trust that the ceasefire will continue because I just don't trust anything Israelis say.
Hezbollah isn't just an organization of people.
Who have goals they want to achieve.
Hezbollah is a resistance and when you.
Attack people, they will resist.