Returning & Rebuilding in Zawtar El Sharqiyeh
A plain, honest guide to war-damage help, compensation and unexploded-ordnance safety for people returning to Zawtar.
Zawtar El Sharqiyeh sits on the hills above the north bank of the Litani — the government-controlled side of the line drawn by the 2024 ceasefire. The village was hit in the 2024 war and again in the fighting of 2026, and like much of the Nabatieh district it is living with destroyed and damaged homes, fields left with unexploded ordnance, and a slow, uncertain return. This is a plain guide to how war-damage help is meant to work in South Lebanon, who the responsible bodies are, and how to stay safe coming back — written from what is publicly known as of mid-2026. Where something is not yet settled, it says so honestly. It is information, not legal advice.
My home was damaged in the war. Who do I report it to?
Start with the Zawtar El Sharqiyeh municipality and the Council of the South — they hold the local record of who has been hit. War-damage assessments in the south are carried out by Lebanese Army engineering teams, and the Council of the South also sends engineers to inspect damaged homes.
Keep your own evidence too: dated photographs of the damage, your ownership or residence papers, and any assessment reference you are given. There is not yet a single national website where an individual files a claim, so a clear local record matters. If you cannot reach the municipality, your mukhtar and neighbours who have already returned are the next point of contact.