Lebanon's health ministry says the number of people killed in the country by Israeli strikes during the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, which escalated at the beginning of March, has surpassed 3,000. It put the death toll at 3,020 on Monday, a grim milestone in the fighting that shows no sign of abating despite a fragile ceasefire.

Lebanon was drawn into the war on 2 March, when the Iran-backed armed Shia Islamist group Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel after an Israeli strike killed Iran's supreme leader. The toll has continued to climb even after Lebanon and Israel agreed on Friday to extend their truce by 45 days, with the two sides set to resume negotiations at the beginning of June.

The health ministry reports that more than 400 of the deaths have occurred since the ceasefire came into effect on 17 April, a period marked by repeated violations on both sides. The truce deal, brokered by the United States, allows Israel to carry out strikes it says are aimed at countering Hezbollah's military activity.

Lebanon has condemned the attacks, stating they undermine its efforts to re-establish the state's exclusive control over armed groups' weapons. Since the ceasefire extension was announced on Friday, Israeli strikes on towns and villages across southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley have continued, tragically resulting in dozens of deaths.

On Saturday, a series of strikes hit more than two dozen villages, with only nine of those attacks preceded by evacuation warnings. Later that day, Hezbollah reported that its fighters targeted the Yaara barracks in northern Israel with attack drones, following claims of multiple operations against Israeli troops in southern Lebanon. Israel's military confirmed that a soldier died during the fighting, raising their losses since the onset of the conflict in March to 20, alongside four civilian casualties.

Currently, Israeli ground forces occupy a strip of territory about 10 km (six miles) from the Lebanese frontier that was seized during the conflict. The ongoing conflict continues to escalate, leaving many in the region in a state of fear and uncertainty about the future.