Israel strikes south Lebanon day after ceasefire extension
People stand by rubble and debris near damaged and collapsed buildings following overnight Israeli bombardment on Lebanon's southern city of Tyre on May 16, 2026. Photo by KAWNAT HAJU / AFP
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Israel launched a series of airstrikes on southern Lebanon
on Saturday, despite the extension of the truce between the two countries.
Israel says it is targeting Hezbollah but the strikes were
preceded by an evacuation warning covering nine villages.
And the continuing bombardment has only increased scepticism
about the truce among the many thousands of Lebanese driven from their homes in
the south.
Lebanon's state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported
strikes on at least five villages on Saturday, including one more than 50
kilometres from the border.
At the same time it reported an new exodus of residents
towards the southern city of Sidon and the capital Beirut.
On Friday, the two countries agreed to extend a ceasefire,
which began on April 17 but has been marred by numerous violations, by another
45 days.
Since the start of the ceasefire, Israel has repeatedly
issued evacuation warnings for south Lebanese villages ahead of strikes.
Over this period their geographical scope has expanded to
include areas north of the Litani River and further from the border.
The Israeli military also struck at least one town that was
not included in the warning, near the southern city of Nabatieh.
Despite the ceasefire, Israel continues to conduct strikes
in Lebanon, and its forces are occupying territory near the border.
Hezbollah, meanwhile, regularly claims attacks on northern
Israel and against the Israeli military in southern Lebanon.
Israeli attacks since the start of the war have killed more
than 2,900 people in Lebanon, including more than 400 since the truce took
effect, according to Lebanese authorities.
Israel has also reported the deaths of 19 soldiers in
southern Lebanon since fighting with Hezbollah erupted.
The latest strikes come after envoys from Israel and Lebanon
held negotiations in Washington -- following the first direct talks in decades
last month between the two countries, which do not have diplomatic relations.
Iran-backed Hezbollah opposes the negotiations and claimed
an attack against Israeli troops in the Lebanese town of Khiam on
Saturday.
The group justified their action by accusing Israel of
ceasefire violations and "attacks that targeted villages in southern
Lebanon".
On Friday an Israeli strike hit a centre of the
Hezbollah-linked Islamic Health Committee in the southern town of Harouf,
authorities said.
Six people were killed, including three paramedics,
according to the Lebanese health ministry.
Displaced residents from southern Lebanon say the truce is
not being implemented.
"This is not a truce as long as Israeli attacks
continue against the south and its people, with deaths, injuries, and
destruction," said Ali Salameh, 60, from a school in Beirut where he has
been displaced since the start of the war on March 2.
Others said they backed Hezbollah to keep fighting Israel in
retaliation for its attacks.
"What kind of truce is this when they have just
threatened villages and people are being displaced? Where is the state? We
stand only with the resistance," said Nawal Mezhir, also displaced from
the south.
Lebanon's negotiating delegation in Washington on Friday
nonetheless welcomed the truce's 45-day extension and the creation of a
US-facilitated security track, saying they "provide critical breathing
space for our citizens, reinforce state institutions, and advance a political
pathway toward lasting stability".
Lebanon was dragged into the Middle East war on March 2 when
Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel in retaliation for the killing of Iran's
supreme leader Ali Khamenei.
An AFP correspondent saw significant destruction at the
targeted site near the coastal city's ancient ruins.
"They destroyed the entire neighbourhood," said
Ibrahim Kahwaji, a tailor who was wounded in the leg.
"They are emptying the south of its population... it's
a real occupation. We want a solution."

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