At least one person has been killed in clashes between supporters of
The fighting, which began late on Saturday and continued throughout the night, came hours after Lebanese opposition forces started to withdraw from the streets of Beirut, Lebanon's capital.
An Al Jazeera correspondent reported on Sunday that all groups involved in the clashes have agreed on a truce to allow the evacuation of injured people.
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An army official in
"One woman has died in her house near Bab al-Tebbaneh," he said, adding that about 7,000 people had fled the fighting.
He said that several people had been wounded in the fighting.
Army challenged
Zeina Khodr, Al Jazeera's correspondent in
"According to the Alawites, the aim [of the government supporters] is clearly to show their power in
She said the army faced a challenge in remaining neutral for the benefit of all Lebanese people.
"The army is in a very difficult position - if it does attack one party the army may split along sectarian lines," she said.
Opposition fighters had earlier seized much of
Lebanese police have said that 44 civilians have been killed and 129 others injured in the fighting.
But the capital is now coming under the control of the army after opposition forces were ordered to stand down by their commanders.
Hezbollah, which heads the opposition, said it would end its takeover of west
However, the opposition said it reserves the right to lead a campaign of civil disobedience until its political demands are met.
Hezbollah network
The fighting erupted after the government said it would take action against Hezbollah's communications network
The government also suspended the head of security at
But Hezbollah said any action against its communications network, which played a crucial role in the group's 34-day war with
It also called for the airport chief to be reinstated.
The violence that followed was the worst internal fighting since
Government concessions
After fierce fighting in
"As for the telecommunications network, the army will look into the issue in a manner that is not harmful to the public interest or the security of the resistance", it said, referring to Hezbollah.
The military's action followed a televised address by Fouad Siniora, the Lebanese prime minister, in which he accused Hezbollah of staging a coup, calling the group's takeover a "poisonous sting" to democracy.
In his speech, Siniora's first public reaction to Hezbollah's takeover of west
"Hezbollah must realise that force of arms will not scare us or make us retreat," he said.
But analysts questioned what the government would be able to do about disarming Hezbollah.
Commenting on Siniora's speech, Hisham Jaber, a former Lebanese army general, told Al Jazeera: "For Hezbollah to give the government its weapons is a joke - the opposition does not trust this government."
Jaber said: "The army would risk being divided and they are not prepared to defend any government. The army is not supposed to protect the government."
"The