The big story of the last 24 hours in southern Lebanon is not the ongoing confrontation between Hezbollah and Israel, but what is happening inside the Shiite camp.
Yesterday, Hassan Mohsen, a well-known opposition figure of Hezbollah in South Lebanon, was killed in his home in the village of Eit. He was killed in a bomb explosion in his home.
Mohsen was formerly a military commander in Hezbollah but refused to participate in the battles in Syria and resigned from the organization.
He continued to criticize the organization's policies in recent years and even burned the effigy of Hassan Nasrallah and Khamenei.
His assassination yesterday sparked outrage among the Shiites in southern Lebanon who are sure that Hezbollah through this assassination is sending a message to anyone who opposes it, especially in this period of escalation with Israel, that they should think twice.
The assassination is an indication that Hezbollah fears that the voices within the Shiite camp will increase against the continuation of the conflict with Israel and it is sending a message in the only way it knows - the elimination of opponents.