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7 Killed, Several Injured in Fresh Israeli Airstrikes on Lebanon

Nabatieh: Seven people were killed and several others injured on Friday in fresh Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon, according to the National News Agency (NNA). The agency reported that an Israeli drone executed a two-wave strike targeting a vehicle near the Husseiniya club in the city of Nabatieh before noon.

According to Anadolu Agency, the attack resulted in the death of two individuals and injured another who were present in the area to collect food aid. The strike also inflicted damage on three ambulances belonging to Nabatieh emergency services, with one rendered completely inoperative.

Additionally, two strikes in the town of Harouf led to the deaths of three people and injuries to four others. Another strike in the town of Tebnine in the Bint Jbeil district claimed the lives of two individuals.

In a separate incident, an Israeli strike targeting a health center in the town of Shabriha near Tyre injured 10 people, including two children and two women. Meanwhile, a strike on the Maachouk area in Tyre resulted in injuries to 16 people, among them a child, six women, and a Canadian national.

Further attacks included a strike on the popular housing area in the city of Tyre, injuring seven people, including a child, and another attack targeting an apartment in Housh Tyre, which wounded four others. Despite a third round of US-mediated talks between Israel and Lebanon at the State Department that extended the ceasefire by 45 days, these strikes occurred.

In another incident, an Israeli drone strike targeted the western neighborhood near the industrial zone in the town of Kfarreman, injuring one person, as reported by the agency. The NNA also noted that the final death toll from an Israeli 'massacre' in the town of Harouf overnight had risen to four, with Israeli warplanes completely destroying a house.

Since March 2, Israeli attacks on Lebanon have resulted in the deaths of more than 2,950 people, injured nearly 9,000, and displaced over 1.6 million, approximately one-fifth of the country's population, according to Lebanese officials.