BEIRUT, May 28 (Reuters) – An Israeli strike hit a building in the southern suburbs of the Lebanese capital on Thursday, the first strike to hit near Beirut in weeks amid a ceasefire that has failed to halt fighting between Israeli troops and Hezbollah in south Lebanon.
The Israeli military said it had conducted a precise strike in Beirut but did not offer additional details.
Two Israeli security sources said the target was Ali al-Husseini, whom they described as head of the missile division within the Imam Hussein Division, a militia that Israeli officials say is aligned with Hezbollah and Iran.
There was no immediate comment from Hezbollah or Iran on the attack. A Lebanese security source said it was carried out with two precision missiles targeting a building in Beirut’s southern suburbs.
The strike dealt another blow to a fraying ceasefire announced by Washington on April 16 that was meant to halt the war raging between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah since March 2.
Exchanges of fire between the two longtime foes have continued, but have been mostly concentrated in southern Lebanon. Apart from a strike on Beirut’s southern suburbs in early May that killed a Hezbollah commander, the capital and its suburbs had been spared new bombardment during the truce.
ISRAEL PUT OFF BEIRUT STRIKES DUE TO US, OFFICIALS SAY
Israeli officials say the military had held off from striking in Beirut for three weeks due to requests from the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump. Still, Israeli surveillance drones are heard flying over Beirut on a daily basis.
The two Israeli security sources said Thursday’s strike came following a “very intense dialogue” with the Trump administration in recent days.
Heavy Israeli strikes hit towns and villages in southern Lebanon overnight and into Thursday, after Israel declared a new swathe of the area “a combat zone”.
The Israeli military said residents should leave any towns south of the Zahrani River, which runs about 40 kilometres (25 miles) north of Israel’s border with Lebanon.
Together with a border zone occupied by its troops, Israel’s evacuation orders over the last three months span about 2,000 sq km of Lebanon – about a fifth of the entire country.
An Israeli strike on Thursday morning killed six people including two children and their parents near the southern town of Adloun, Lebanon’s health ministry said.
Another strike, on the port city of Sidon, killed five people including two women. Sidon lies outside of the area designated as a combat zone by the Israeli military, and the strike was carried out without warning.
Taghrida Ramadan, a woman living in Sidon, told Reuters she had been sleeping at home when she was jolted awake by the strike, which hit a building across from hers.
“We looked around and found the rubble on us – stones from the strike, because it was nearby and directly facing us,” Ramadan said. While her house was damaged, her relatives were not seriously injured.
Another Israeli strike later on Thursday killed two Syrian nationals, including a child, in the city of Tyre, which falls within the zone Israel said must be emptied.
(Reporting by Maya Gebeily, Laila Bassam, Emilie Madi and Raghed Waked in Beirut; Rami Ayyub in Jerusalem; Ahmed Elimam and Jana Choukeir; Writing by Maya Gebeily; Editing by Toby Chopra)



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