102 resultsfor “ceasefire violations by Israel in Lebanon”
ceasefire deal between the governments of Israel and Lebanon on 16 April. Despite the agreement, Israel and Hezbollah have continued with their attacks, accusing each other of violations
Israel and Hezbollah have reported attacks from one another since the ceasefire came into place, accusing each other of violating the agreement. On Saturday, Netanyahu ordered the Israeli military to "vigorously attack Hezbollah targets
Lebanon on Saturday, according to the country's state news agency. The Israeli military said Hezbollah had fired rockets at Israel. Despite a ceasefire between Israel and the Iran-backed militant group, both sides have
ceasefire. The Israeli military maintains that the agreement permits it to act against "planned, imminent or ongoing attacks". Lebanese officials dispute that interpretation and accuse Israel of repeated violations. Hezbollah has also acknowledged carrying
Israel has continued to bomb Gaza as it simultaneously attacks south Lebanon, in violation of a separate truce with Hezbollah. Hamas on Friday called the deadly attacks in Gaza part of the Israeli government
Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs, despite warnings by officials not to attempt to return to their homes until it became clear whether the ceasefire would hold. The Lebanese army said early on Friday that
ceasefire between Israel and the armed group Hezbollah, which the former repeatedly breached with near-daily violations, had not been implemented. ## Hezbollah lawmaker slams Beirut’s ‘concessions’ The meeting between the Lebanese and Israeli envoys
Lebanon-based group said. “Because we do not trust this enemy, the resistance fighters will remain in the field, ready to respond to any violations of the aggression. A ceasefire cannot be unilateral; it must
violated the ceasefire understanding and had “so far prevented progress in negotiations”. It added that “no clear prospect for productive negotiations is foreseen” under current conditions and dismissed US statements on talks as “a media
ceasefire came into force between Israel and Lebanon on Friday. It has paused six weeks of fighting between the IDF and the Shia Muslim armed group Hezbollah, although both sides have accused each other
Lebanon's south is about six miles from the country's 's border with Israel, but it now lies less than a mile from what Israel has called the "yellow line" in the south — marking
violations of the truce by Israel continue across southern Lebanon, where Israeli forces have established a [“Yellow Line”](/news/2026/4/19/does-israels-yellow-line-violate-the-lebanon-ceasefire) demarcating the territory they are occupying, like they have done in Gaza. Since March 2 when
Lebanon despite a US-brokered ceasefire, signalling a widening of the conflict beyond the country’s south. - **Hezbollah steps up attacks:** Hezbollah says its fighters carried out 17 targeted strikes against Israeli forces inside Lebanese
Lebanon wounding civilians and damaging homes despite a 10-day ceasefire. ## In Iran - The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said oil production across the Middle East could be targeted if attacks were launched from Gulf
violating the November 2024 ceasefire signed with Hezbollah almost daily, killing hundreds. ## A visual map of obliteration Bint Jbeil has emerged as the epicentre of this devastation, functioning as a concentrated model of Israel
ceasefire. - **Naval incidents escalate:** Iran’s IRGC reported that they captured two foreign vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and opened fire on a third ship for violating their restrictions on ships passing through
violations of international humanitarian and human rights law”, according to the UN Human Rights Council. Israel escalated its attacks on Lebanon on March 2 after the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah fired rockets into Israel
ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon came into effect on 16 April. The US, which announced the deal, urged Hezbollah to abide by its terms. "Everything suggests that responsibility for this attack lies with Hezbollah," Macron
Lebanon. The statement then “encouraged” Israel to meet the EU’s conditions on human rights under the EU-Israel Association Agreement. On March 30, just before the final vote on the bill, European countries, including
Lebanon’s parliamentary speaker and leader of the Amal Movement, released statements asking their supporters not to return to their homes at the immediate start of the ceasefire. “We ask everyone to refrain from returning