Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon kill 17, reports say
Nine of them were killed in a series of attacks in the town of Tayr Debba, according to Lebanon's state news agency.
Israeli air strikes have killed at least 17 people in southern Lebanon, Lebanese media say.
Nine people were killed in a series of strikes in the town of Tayr Debba, according to Lebanon's state-run National News Agency (NNA).
Meanwhile, the Iranian-backed armed group Hezbollah said it carried out more attacks on Israeli troops occupying parts of the country's south.
On Tuesday, 15 people were reportedly killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon, as Israel rejected a warning from Iran not to continue its campaign against Hezbollah.
Iran's leaders are demanding that any deal to end its war with the US and Israel also covers Lebanon, complicating negotiations with US President Trump.
NNA reported that Israeli air and artillery strikes intensified across the south of the country on Wednesday, with attacks in a number of cities, towns and villages.
It said nine people were killed when Israeli jets and drones carried out at least four strikes in Tayr Debba, just east of the port city of Tyre.
Two Israeli strikes killed three other people in the nearby village of Deir Qanoun el-Nahr, while two people were killed in Seddiqin, south-east of Tyre, it added.
Later, there was an attack in the centre of the city of Sidon, which is located on the coast roughly halfway between Tyre and the capital Beirut.
An AFP news agency correspondent said they heard an explosion before seeing a car burning. Two people were pulled from the vehicle by rescuers, they added.
NNA said the car was targeted by an Israeli drone and that the two people died.
One person was also reportedly killed in the Massaken al-Shaabiya area of Tyre.
On Tuesday, Israeli strikes in Massaken al-Shaabiya and elsewhere in Tyre killed 11 people, the Lebanese health ministry said, as the Israeli military issued a new evacuation order for the city that included its Christian quarter for the first time.
Hezbollah announced that its fighters had targeted gatherings of Israeli troops and military vehicles in the southern Bayada and Yohmor areas with rocket barrages and shellfire.
Meanwhile, UN human rights chief Volker Türk announced on Wednesday that he was sending a team of human rights investigators to Lebanon, at the request of the Lebanese government.
The team will look at possible human rights violations committed by all sides since the start of March, and is expected to present its findings at the end of July. Evidence gathered could be used in possible prosecutions for war crimes.
Israel has been informed of the mission, but it remains unclear whether it will co-operate.
Lebanon was drawn into
📌 Kaynak
Bu özet BBC World kaynağından otomatik derlenmiştir. Tamamı için orijinal habere gidin.
Orijinal haberi oku →