Israel raided the Beirut area, killing at least 14 in southern Lebanon

Listen to this article
Average 4 minutes
The audio version of this article was created by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations may occur. We are working with our partners to continuously review and improve the results.
Israel’s military raided an area south of Beirut on Thursday afternoon, its military said, amid widespread tensions in southern Lebanon where Israeli forces crossed the Litani River in recent days and warned residents to leave much of the area.
The purpose of the airstrikes in the suburb of Choueifat was not yet clear. Videos from the area, which is close to Beirut’s international airport, showed white smoke billowing from the residential area.
A strike in the Beirut area in early May killed a military officer with the Hezbollah elite Radwan Forces.
Earlier on Thursday, Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon – including Tyre, the country’s fourth largest city – killed at least 14 people as their conflict with Hezbollah continued.
Israel had issued warnings to eight buildings and neighborhoods in the coastal city before Thursday’s attack, prompting many people to flee the area.
Scores of others were injured, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Health and the state-run National News Agency.

Meanwhile, an Israeli soldier was killed in a Hezbollah drone strike in northern Israel, the Israeli military said. Two reserves were injured.
This intensification comes after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced an increase in attacks by the Israeli army in Lebanon, which was caused by Hezbollah’s use of fiber-optic drones that attacked Israeli forces in Lebanon and reached some cities on the border of northern Israel.
Lebanese and Israeli military officials will hold their first security talks on Friday in Washington. The talks extended a ceasefire that went into effect on April 17, although attacks have intensified.
Hezbollah rejected the talks and instead endorsed its key ally Iran, which made ending the war in Lebanon a condition of its talks with Pakistan-led Washington.
In the city of Sidon, an Israeli plane crashed into a building where some families who left their homes live, killing five people and injuring 21, among them five children. Among those who were killed was Hossan Zeidan, who was a former journalist of Iran’s al-Aalam Arabic language television.
Mohammad Al-Gharbi, who lived across the street from the building, woke up to the sound of the explosion.
“I was in my room when part of the wall and broken glass fell on me, and there was chaos,” he said. “This building that was hit had six apartments that were occupied by poor families who fled south to escape the attack there, but it was hit here.”
An increase in attacks on both sides of the border has put the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah at risk.
In the nearby coastal town of Adloun, an Israeli jet crashed into a car and a fleeing family, killing six people, four of whom were two children and their parents, the Lebanese Ministry of Health said. Another drone strike that came without warning killed two people who were riding a motorcycle near Tyre. The purpose of the attack was not yet clear, NNA reported.
Elsewhere near the town of Nabatiyeh, the Lebanese army said a soldier was killed in an Israeli strike while driving his motorcycle.
Hezbollah has claimed a number of drone and rocket attacks that it says have targeted Israeli forces in southern Lebanon and northern Israel. The group said on Thursday that it had attacked several Israeli soldiers and tanks that had crossed the Litani river and entered the town of Zawtar al-Sharqieh near Nabatiyeh, as fighting continued.
More than a million people in Lebanon were displaced by the war between Israel and Hezbollah, which broke out when Hezbollah fired rockets into northern Israel on March 2 in cooperation with Iran, two days after the start of the Iran war.
At least 3,269 people have been killed in Israeli strikes since the start of the war, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Health, and more than 9,800 have been injured.
According to Netanyahu’s office, at least 23 Israeli soldiers and contractors were killed in or near southern Lebanon and two civilians were killed in northern Israel, mostly by drones.



