Meanwhile, in the Bekaa, northeast of Lebanon, occupation aircraft carried out a series of airstrikes against at least 9 areas in the mountain range overlooking the northern Bekaa.
Israeli raids in the Bekaa targeted Harbta and Zaboud, the Jrud of Hermel and the heights surrounding the town of Zaboud.
A civilian was martyred and six others were injured in an Israeli raid targeting the outskirts of the town of Boudai in the Bekaa.
These continued Israeli attacks on Lebanese villages and localities, which have particularly intensified in recent days, come after Israel committed a massacre in the southern suburbs on Friday, targeting a residential building in a densely populated area of Beirut’s southern suburbs.
This attack resulted in the death of at least 60 people, including around ten children, according to the latest report announced by the Lebanese Ministry of Health.
A Hezbollah commander and his companions were also martyred in the strike.
Before that, Israel had committed an electronic massacre on Tuesday and Wednesday by blowing up pagers and walkie-talkies, killing 37 and injuring nearly 3,000 among various sections of Lebanese society.
In response to repeated Israeli aggressions targeting various Lebanese regions and in support of Gaza, Hezbollah targeted the Ramat David base and airport twice at dawn on Sunday with dozens of Fadi 1 and Fadi 2 missiles.
It also targeted the military-industrial complexes of the Israeli company Rafael, which specializes in electronic means and equipment, north of the occupied city of Haifa, with dozens of Fadi 1 and Fadi 2 missiles.
The messages come as the Israeli military wages an intense campaign of heavy airstrikes on Hezbollah strongholds and has for the first time advised Lebanese to “stay away from the targets” of the party in the south of the country.
“Residents in Beirut and several areas received messages on the landline network, the source of which is the Israeli enemy, asking them to quickly evacuate the places where they are,” ANI reported.
The office of Information Minister Ziad Makari, located in Beirut in an area housing several ministries, told AFP that it had received such a call.
“The landline rang (…) when the minister’s assistant answered, she heard a recorded message asking (staff) to evacuate the building or risk being bombed,” the source said.
Asked by AFP, Imad Kreidieh, director of the state operator Ogero, affirmed that “the fixed network system in Lebanon blocks all communications coming from Israel”, but the latter “circumvents the communication systems by using the code of a friendly country”, he added.
The Israeli army announced on Monday that its strikes against the pro-Iranian Hezbollah would “continue in the near future” and that they would be “more significant and more precise”.