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Civilians are being displaced, taking shelter in tents, parks and cars, as Israel retaliates to Hezbollah rocket attack.
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The sweeping orders came as hostilities between Israel and the Iran-backed group continued to escalate. Hours after issuing the instruction, the military said it had begun "a wave of strikes" in the south.
Tens of thousands of people in Lebanon have already been displaced since fighting erupted on Monday.
One man still living in southern Lebanon told the BBC that he would not leave his home.
"Let them say whatever they want - I'm not going to Beirut to be on the streets," Mohamed, 25, said.
"I'm not next to Hezbollah or any of its infrastructure, so I should be fine," he said, adding that he would rather die in his home than flee.
Another man said he and his disabled wife had already moved this week and did not know whether they would be able to find shelter further north.
In the capital, Beirut, displaced civilians have been sleeping in shelters, on roadsides, in parks and in their cars.
Volunteers at food kitchens and shelters told the BBC they were concerned they would not be able to keep up with the rising demand.
Those displaced have fled from southern Lebanon, the eastern Bekaa Valley, and the Dahieh suburbs of southern Beirut - the heartlands of Hezbollah and of Lebanon's Shia Muslim community.
At one displacement camp on the outskirts of Beirut, hundreds of people got ready for Iftar - a meal eaten at sunset to break the Ramadan fast - on Tuesday evening.
Some were still wearing the pyjamas they had on when they fled their homes.
Everyone the BBC spoke to had been displaced multiple times before by hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, a Shia militia and political party that is proscribed as a terrorist organisation in the US, UK and other countries.
"Last time [I was displaced], I stayed for 26 days in a tent," 56-year-old Lamyaa said. "We were humiliat
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