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A woman runs past a destoyed building, still in flames, after it was attacked by Israeli warplane missiles, in the southern suburbs of Beirut. (AP)
Air force shoots down bomb-laden Hezbollah drone over Israel
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Post Reporter: Israelis left rockets intact, endangering civilians for PR
Arab foreign ministers to send delegation to UN in support of Lebanon
As UN cease-fire debate looms, Israel, Hezbollah step up attacks
Paratrooper killed Monday morning in Bint Jbeil battle

 
Israeli strikes in south Beirut, south Lebanon; 3 soldiers die in clashes
By Associated Press  August 7, 2006
 
Israeli jets launched fresh strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs and Lebanon's southern and eastern regions Monday, killing dozens of Hezbollah fighters. The stepped up bombardment came a day after cross-border rockets killed 15 Israelis. In Bint Jbeil, an Israeli soldier died in clashes. Hezbollah claimed to have killed four Israelis soldiers in ground fighting in Houla, but the IDF said the troops were only lightly wounded.

In Bint Jbeil, an Israeli soldier died in a clash. Later two additional soldiers were reported killed by an anti-tank weapon.

Hezbollah claimed to have killed four Israelis soldiers in ground fighting in Houla, but the IDF said four soldiers were only lightly wounded.

The air raids, particularly intense on the Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs of the capital, came hours before Arab foreign ministers were expected to arrive for an emergency meeting. The ministers were expected to fly into Beirut international airport in the southern end of the capital at midmorning. The airport has been closed to commercial traffic since July 13 after Israel attacked its runways.

The sound of eight loud explosions in less than an hour rang out from the southern suburbs and the roar of raiding jets shook the Lebanese capital at daybreak. The missiles kicked up smoke and dust in the sky in neighborhoods that have been devastated by repeated Israeli strikes since fighting began July 12. Residents have long fled the area.

Warplanes carried out a series of air raids on southern Lebanon early Monday and through the morning.

A woman and her daughter were killed in an attack near a Lebanese army checkpoint between the villages of Harouf and Dweir, security officials said. Four other people were killed in a raid on that destroyed a house in Kfar Tebnit.

Three air raids on the town of Ghaziyeh destroyed three buildings. At least one person was killed and 14 were wounded, according to hospital officials.

In the village of Ghassaniyeh, a building collapsed on its residents, and at least one body was retrieved from under the rubble. Witnesses and civil defense workers at the scene said six more people were buried under the rubble but that could not be confirmed. Two other people were wounded in damaged nearby houses.

Women wailed as a body was pulled from under the rubble. A villager who last saw the family Sunday night said there were seven in the building. He called their cell phone but there was no reply. About two dozen rescuers used sledgehammers and shovels to dig through the debris. A bulldozer was brought in the morning to clear the rubble to facilitate the search for bodies.

It was not known why the house was targeted.

Five air raids struck the market town of Nabatiyeh, targeting two office buildings, a house and one of the offices of Shiite Muslim Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah. No casualties were reported there or in raids on the villages of Jibsheet and Toul.

Israeli warplanes targeted a northeastern region of Lebanon that is a symbol of Hezbollah power. Roads in the Bekaa Valley region were hit to render them unusable.

At least four explosions were heard around the Bekaa Valley city of Baalbek, 63 miles north of Israel's border, witnesses said. The Israeli military confirmed that it had hit several targets in the Baalbek area. There was no immediate word on casualties.

Hezbollah has many positions in the Baalbek area. Israeli commandos on Wednesday landed troops in the area, fought guerrillas and kidnapped several people before withdrawing. Sixteen Lebanese were killed in that raid.

Warplanes struck roads about 13 miles south of Baalbek. A large factory for construction materials was hit, and several trucks belonging to the plant were destroyed.

Jet fighters also attacked the Rashaya region farther south on the corridor linking southern regions with the Bekaa in the country's east, the witnesses said.

A road near the Beirut border post at Masnaa on the Beirut-Damascus highway, a frequent target of attack, was hit again early Monday.

The renewed airstrikes came as Hezbollah battled Israeli forces attempting to advance deeper into southern Lebanon early Monday.

Hezbollah engaged Israeli infantrymen attempting to advance on the border villages of Aita al-Shaab, Rub Thalatheen and Dibel, the guerrillas' TV station said. At Houla, guerrillas ambushed an advancing Israeli army unit and heavy fighting ensued.

In addition to repeated air raids for nearly a month, Israel has sent thousands of troops into southern Lebanon to try to stop Hezbollah rocket attacks that on Sunday killed 12 Israeli soldiers and three civilians in the deadliest such strikes.


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