Smoke rises from the town of Shweikin and the Ali al-Tahir hill area in the Nabatieh Governorate of southern Lebanon following Israeli airstrikes

Hezbollah has 'full right' to confront Israel, says MP

· RTE.ie

Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah has said the group had the right to respond to Israeli attacks, as Israel kept up strikes on Lebanon despite a new ceasefire announced a day earlier.

"There is talk of a ceasefire. For us, what concerns us is that the enemy fully and comprehensively respects the ceasefire, and doesn't attempt to attack our country and villages or seek to occupy any new position," Mr Fadlallah said in a statement.

He added that "the resistance has the full right to confront this enemy when it attacks us, as it is the aggressor and the occupier".

Earlier Lebanese official media said fresh Israeli strikes on the country's south today killed five people, despite a new ceasefire between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah group announced a day earlier.

One Lebanese soldier is believed to have been killed in the strikes.

The state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported Israeli airstrikes on more than a dozen south Lebanon locations after midnight and into this morning, many in and around the Nabatieh area.

It also reported Israeli artillery shelling on Nabatieh city and its outskirts, a region where fighting has been focused in recent days.

The NNA said three people were killed in airstrikes on the town of Arab Salim, while one person was killed in Deir Zahrani, and another after "an enemy drone launched a strike on a motorbike" at the entrance of the town of Dweir.

Yesterday, a US official told AFP an immediate truce between Israel and Hezbollah had been brokered by US and Qatari mediators following talks with Israel and Iran. A Gulf diplomat confirmed the ceasefire.

Israel's ambassador to the US said his country would commit to the ceasefire if Hezbollah respected it.
Previous truce announcements have done little to stop attacks from either side.


Read: Latest Middle East headlines


The announcement came as Lebanon's health ministry said Israeli airstrikes and bombardment on the country's south and east killed 47 people yesterday, the worst violence since Washington and Tehran this week sealed a deal to halt the wider Middle East war.

That agreement was supposed to also halt fighting between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Israel's military yesterday said four of its soldiers were killed, and reported more than 150 strikes on Lebanon, killing "dozens of Hezbollah terrorists".

Also yesterday, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun told US Secretary of State Marco Rubio that a comprehensive ceasefire was needed in order for talks with Israel to progress.

Under US pressure, Lebanon in April began direct talks with Israel in Washington aimed at ending the hostilities and separating the Israel-Hezbollah conflict from the regional war.

A fifth round of talks is due to begin on Tuesday, according to the State Department.

US officials including President Donald Trump have expressed frustration at Israel's campaign in Lebanon.

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesteriday reiterated that Israeli troops would stay in south Lebanon "as long as necessary".

Hezbollah drew Lebanon into the Middle East war in early March with rocket fire at Israel to avenge the killing of Iran's supreme leader in US-Israeli strikes.

Israel responded with a massive campaign of airstrikes and a ground invasion.