The toll of death announced when Israel launches a new attack in the south of Lebanon, killing a person and hurting three.
The United Nations says that at least 71 civilians have been killed by Israeli forces in Lebanon since the fire was reached at the end of last year.
Thameen al-Kheetan, spokesman for the UN Office for the High Commissioner of Human Rights (OHCHR), said Tuesday that the dead number included 14 women and nine children. He asked for research on “each and every military actions where civilians are killed.”
Ohchr raised concerns about the recent Israeli military operations that reached the civil infrastructure, including a strike on April 3 that destroyed a recently established medical center led by the Islamic Health Society in the southern city of Naqourra.
He also noted that at least five rockets, two mortars and a drone have been thrown from Lebanon to northern Israel, according to the Israeli army, and tens of thousands of Israeli remain displaced from the north.
“The high fire must be maintained, and any escalation is a risk of stability in general in Lebanon, Israel and the entire region,” Al-Kheetan said.
Later, on Tuesday, the Lebanon Ministry of Public Health reported that an attack with unmanned Israeli planes in a car in the southern city of Aitoun killed a person and wounded three, including a child.
Israeli attacks
Israel has continued attacking Lebanon, including attacks against the capital, Beirut, from a high fire on November 27, which detained a large extent more than a year of hostilities between Israel and the Armed Group Hezbollah, including two.
Under the truce, Hezbollah had to withdraw fighters from the south of the Litani River from Lebanon and dismantle any removal military infrastructure there, while Israel took out all its forces from the south of Lebanon.
The Army of Lebanon has been deployed in the south near the border with Israel, since Israeli forces have retired to Merca Israel continue to occupy five fortified positions in Lebanon that considers “strategic.”
The Lebanese president, Joseph Aoun Al Jazeera, on Monday, the army was “dismantling tunnels and warehouses and confiscating weapons” south of the Litani “without any hezbollah problem.”
On Thursday, a senior Hezbollah official told the Reuters news agency that the group is ready to hold conversations with the Lebanese president about his weapons that Er Israel withdraws from the south of Lebanon and stops his attacks.