Subscribing is the best way to get our best stories immediately.
Lebanon reported Israeli strikes in the country’s south on Saturday, as the Israeli army issued evacuation warnings for the city of Nabatieh and more than 20 other locations ahead of raids.
The latest strikes came as the US and Iran indicated they were close to reaching a deal on ending the Middle East war that could also include Lebanon, which was drawn into the conflict when Hezbollah attacked Israel in support of its patron Tehran.
The state-run National News Agency (NNA) said Israeli airstrikes hit several areas covered by the latest warnings, including the villages of Rihan and Sujud not far from Nabatieh, as well as other areas that were not mentioned.
An AFP photojournalist in the Nabatieh area heard blasts around Kfar Remman, which has been repeatedly targeted, and saw a plume of smoke rising from Kfar Tebnit, which was not included in the evacuation warnings.
NNA also said an Israeli strike killed a local official in Rihan, located in the southern region of Jezzine.
An AFP correspondent in Nabatieh said the city was almost deserted, reporting artillery shelling there and in nearby areas overnight and on Saturday.
The Israeli military had issued two warnings to residents of 24 locations — both in and around Nabatieh, and nearer to the coast — to “evacuate your homes immediately and move to the north of the Zahrani River”, around 45 kilometres (28 miles) from the southern border with Israel.
Last month Israel declared all areas south of the river “combat zones”, and has since been heavily striking the area.
Hezbollah, which has kept up attacks on invading Israeli troops, said its fighters launched drone attacks on Israeli military vehicles in the south.
Israel’s military also said it “intercepted a suspicious aerial target that crossed from Lebanon into Israeli territory”.
It later announced that “over the past 24 hours, more than 70 Hezbollah terrorist infrastructure sites were struck”.
Iran insists that Lebanon must be part of any agreement to end the wider Middle East war, and a senior US official said Friday that a draft peace deal “includes Lebanon”.
Neither Israel nor Hezbollah have respected a ceasefire meant to take effect in April, and a conditional truce deal announced this month after Lebanese-Israeli negotiations in Washington has also failed to halt the fighting.
Hezbollah rejected both the direct talks and the conditional agreement, which requires it to cease attacks but makes no mention of Israel doing so or withdrawing troops from Lebanon.
Lebanon says Israel’s massive campaign of airstrikes and ground invasion have so far killed 3,756 people.
Lebanon’s leaders, meanwhile, have accused Tehran of treating their country as a “bargaining chip”.
Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Fayyad said on Saturday Lebanon should make do with any US-Iran deal that included the country.
“We want the Lebanese state to negotiate for itself, and nobody is suggesting forfeiting this role,” Fayyad said, “however, the state must abandon the policy of being crushed in the face of the Israelis and submission to the Americans.”
The prime minister of Pakistan, which has mediated between Tehran and Washington, insisted Saturday that a deal was closer “than ever before”.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said in a statement that Lebanon faces “a fateful test”.
“Either its people unite around a sovereign state that monopolises weapons, upholds the law and protects citizens irrespective of their affiliation or position, or it remains hostage to the logic of militias,” he said.
Further Israel-Lebanon talks are scheduled for later this month.