Lebanon: Hamas-allied official survives Israeli strike, security source says
An Israeli drone strike on eastern Lebanon targeted a Lebanese official from a Hamas-allied group who escaped the attempted killing, a Lebanese security source said Monday.
Lebanon's official National News Agency said the strike Sunday near the village of Suwairi in the Bekaa Valley killed a Syrian civilian in his vehicle.
The security source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP that the target was Mohammad Assaf of Jamaa Islamiya, a Lebanese militant group closely linked to Palestinian group Hamas.
Assaf was travelling on the road that was struck at the time of the attack, said the source, who had initially identified the target as a Hamas official in Lebanon.
Israeli forces along its northern border with Lebanon have exchanged near-daily fire with Hezbollah, since Tel Aviv's military operation began in Gaza on October 7.
Israel has also targeted Hezbollah and Hamas officials in Lebanon, including in strikes deep into Lebanese territory.
The strike in the Suwairi area, near Lebanon's border with Syria, was the first Israeli attack there in nearly six months of war.
On January 2, a strike widely blamed on Israel killed Hamas's deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri in a southern Beirut suburb that is a Hezbollah stronghold.
According to another security source, pre-dawn Israeli strikes on Sunday wounded four people, including a Hezbollah member, in Baalbek, further north in the Bekaa Valley.
The cross-border violence since early October has killed at least 326 people in Lebanon, most of them Hezbollah fighters but also 57 civilians, according to an AFP tally.
Tens of thousands of people have been displaced by the violence in Lebanon's south and Israel's north.