On Friday night, Israel launched its largest airstrike series in southern Lebanon since the ceasefire on November 27th.
Nearly 30 minutes of airstrikes have been reported in different towns and villages in southern Lebanon as Israeli forces claimed they were targeting locations in Hezbollah, the New Arab reported.
No casualties have been reported as the strike reportedly hit uninhabited areas, according to local media.
On Friday, the Lebanese national news agency said Israeli forces had shot and killed three people in Kfalkela, a border village that was left in abandoned by Israeli attacks.
Earlier this week, the Israeli Army announced it had carried out the biggest assassination of Commander Hezbollah since the ceasefire began, saying the aircraft had attacked Khodr Hashem, the naval commander of Hezbollah Radwan’s army, in Minami Village, Kana.
Last year, the US-brokered ceasefire agreement between Hezbollah and Israel requires Shiite groups to separate all troops from Lebanon from the South and Israel.
The Lebanese army is stipulated to deploy thousands of soldiers in the south and maintain it gently in the region along with the United Nations Peacekeeping Forces (UNIFIL).
But despite the agreement, Israel is running airstrikes in its biggest presence in southern Lebanon on Friday, and occasionally along the border with Syria, in the country’s east.