
Israeli-Hezbollah Hostilities Continue Hours Before Ceasefire
13 August 2006
Just hours before the ceasefire deadline that is supposed to end hostilities, Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants continued air strikes against each other.
Lebanese officials say at least seven people were killed in Israeli strikes late Sunday in eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley.
The attacks capped a day that saw some of the fiercest fighting in the month-long war.
Israeli airstrikes battered neighborhoods Sunday in south Beirut, while in southern Lebanon 30,000 Israeli soldiers fought Hezbollah guerrillas on the ground. Israel says five soldiers were killed. Lebanese officials said at least 15 people died.
Hezbollah fired 250 rockets into Israel - the most in a single day. The rockets hit Haifa and several other parts of northern Israel and killed at least one civilian.
The Israeli and Lebanese governments have each approved the United Nations resolution that calls for a full cessation of hostilities before a U.N. peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon is increased to 15,000 troops.
The Lebanese army is also expected to deploy 15,000 troops near the border.
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni says Israeli forces will leave Lebanon when the Lebanese army and an expanded international force deploy.
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah says his forces will abide by the U.N. agreement, but said Hezbollah will continue fighting until Israeli troops leave Lebanon.
At least 900 Lebanese - most of them civilians - have been killed since the fighting began. More than 140 Israelis - most of them soldiers - have died since Hezbollah kidnapped two Israeli soldiers, triggering the fighting on July 12.
Some information for this report was provided by AP and Reuters
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