On the 11th, two Hezbollah members and the village mayor were also killed.
A total of 147 deaths on the Lebanese side since October 8.
As fighting intensified on the border between Lebanon and Israel on the 11th, two Hezbollah militants and the mayor of Aitarun village were killed and three civilians were seriously injured, a Lebanese military source told Xinhua News Agency.
According to this, this damage was caused by Israeli air strikes and artillery fire between both sides on the southern border of Lebanon that day.
A Lebanese military source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said two Hezbollah fighters were killed in three airstrikes by Israeli forces targeting the village of Aitarun, southwestern of the border.
Also, Hussein Ali Mansour, 88, the mayor of Taybe, another southeastern town, was killed when an Israeli artillery shell hit his house, the source said. However, the other eight people sitting with the mayor on the balcony of the house all survived.
The injuries to the three civilians injured in the airstrike occurred in and around the village of Aita Ashab in southern Lebanon.
Israeli fighter bombers and drones carried out airstrikes on the eastern and western parts of the Lebanese border that day, destroying five houses and partially destroying 17, causing casualties.
The Lebanese Army also launched four missile attacks against northern Israel, but all were neutralized by the Israeli Air Force’s Iron Dome air defense network.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah’s armed Islamic resistance movement attacked several villages and places where people gathered in Israel that day, and Israeli media reported that three Israeli soldiers were injured in the border area and were transported by helicopter to Rambam Hospital in Haifa.
As a result of the fighting between Hezbollah, which began attacking Israel in support of Hamas on October 8, and the Israeli military, which launched a retaliatory attack, 147 people, including 101 Hezbollah members, have been killed on the Lebanese side so far.
They included one member of the Lebanese Army, one member of the Armagh Movement, 16 members of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, and 28 civilians.
Three journalists were among the civilian dead, Lebanese security forces sources said.
Source: Donga
Mark Jones is a world traveler and journalist for News Rebeat. With a curious mind and a love of adventure, Mark brings a unique perspective to the latest global events and provides in-depth and thought-provoking coverage of the world at large.