Nine killed, 38 wounded near Lebanon's Sidon by Israeli strikes

The suburb of Haret Saida in Sidon which was targeted, was not listed among the areas to be evacuated by the Israeli army.
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The strike on Sidon was the first since Israel began intensifying its aggression on Lebanon in late September [Getty/file photo]

Lebanon's health ministry said nine people were killed and 38 others wounded on Sunday in an Israeli strike near the southern city of Sidon, where an AFP correspondent said a building was targeted.

The strike hit a densely-populated area in a Sidon suburb that saw an influx of families displaced from areas further south.

It was the first strike there since Israel began intensifying its aggression on Lebanon in late September, before subsequently invading the country's south in early October. 

"The Israeli enemy's raid on Haret Saida resulted in a toll of eight killed," the health ministry said, revising an earlier toll of two dead.

The official National News Agency said a child was among the victims.

An AFP correspondent said one apartment was destroyed in the strike on a three-storey residential complex.

Surrounding shops and buildings were also damaged, the correspondent said, as paramedics rushed to the site of the attack to search for survivors.

The Israeli army had issued an evacuation warning for several areas in south Lebanon on Sunday, but Haret Saida was not listed among the areas to be targeted.

The war since September 23 has left at least 1,615 people dead in Lebanon, according to an AFP tally of nationwide health ministry figures, though the real number is likely to be higher due to gaps in the data.

At least 2,653 people in Lebanon have been killed since Israel and Hezbollah began exchanging cross-border fire on October 8 last year, one day after Israel's war in Gaza started.

At least 1.3 million people have been displaced, more than 800,000 of them within Lebanon's borders, according to the UN's migration agency.

More than half a million people have crossed into Syria, according to Lebanese authorities, most of them Syrians.