Key facts
- Israeli strikes killed at least 10 people in Lebanon on Saturday, hours after a ceasefire took effect.
- Israel stated the strikes were in response to over 50 projectiles fired by Hezbollah.
- A residential building in Barish was hit, killing a father, mother, and their two children.
- Lebanon's health ministry reported 3,912 people killed in Israeli attacks since March 2.
- Hezbollah vowed to continue resistance as long as Israeli forces remain in Lebanon.
Israeli strikes in Lebanon killed at least 10 people on Saturday, hours after a ceasefire with Hezbollah was announced. Israel stated it was responding to projectiles fired by the Iran-backed group, highlighting the fragility of the truce. Lebanon's state news agency reported Israeli warplanes and drones hit multiple locations in the south and the Bekaa Valley. One of the deadliest strikes hit a residential building in the southern town of Barish, killing a father, mother, and their two children. The Lebanese army reported an Israeli strike killed a soldier on the Kfarrumman-Nabatieh road. A senior Hezbollah official stated the group would continue resistance as long as Israeli forces remained in Lebanon. The U.S.-Iran understanding announced this week calls for an immediate, permanent end to military operations across multiple fronts, including Lebanon.
