Lebanon says over 2,100 killed since Israeli attacks resumed

Lebanese health ministry reports more than 2,100 dead and 7,000 wounded in the six weeks since Israel renewed nationwide military operations.

Lebanese health ministry reports more than 2,100 dead and 7,000 wounded in the six weeks since Israel renewed nationwide military operations. | Contesto: cronaca

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  • Lebanon says over 2,100 killed since Israeli attacks resumed

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The Lebanese Ministry of Health announced on Monday that at least 2,167 people have been killed and another 7,061 wounded since Israel resumed military attacks across Lebanon on March 2. The figures, which cover a period of just over six weeks, represent a sharp and devastating escalation in the long-running conflict between the two nations, marking one of the deadliest phases in recent memory. The ministry's statement did not provide a breakdown of casualties between combatants and civilians, but previous reporting from the region has indicated a significant toll on non-combatants, including women and children, from airstrikes and artillery bombardments in populated areas. The renewed offensive, which Israeli officials have described as a necessary response to persistent rocket fire from Lebanese territory, has seen operations expand beyond the traditional flashpoint of the southern border. Lebanese authorities report strikes targeting infrastructure, residential neighborhoods, and agricultural land in multiple governorates. The scale and geographic scope of the attacks have overwhelmed local emergency services and hospitals, which are struggling with shortages of medical supplies, fuel for generators, and bed capacity. Aid organizations have issued urgent appeals for humanitarian corridors to allow the delivery of essential goods and the evacuation of the critically wounded. This latest chapter of violence ruptured a period of fragile, de facto calm that had largely held since a major exchange of fire in January. The underlying tensions, however, have simmered for years, rooted in border disputes and the broader regional confrontation between Israel and Iranian-backed forces, including Hezbollah, which holds significant political and military power in Lebanon. The current hostilities have effectively shattered previous unwritten rules of engagement, with both sides employing heavier weaponry and striking deeper into each other's territory. Analysts note that the conflict risks becoming a self-sustaining cycle of retaliation, with each strike prompting a more forceful response. The human cost is compounded by Lebanon's profound pre-existing economic and...

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Categoria: cronaca