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Thousands flee Lebanon after devastating Israeli airstrikes kill 492 - but so far UK holds off from ordering evacuation of citizens

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Thousands of people fled southern Lebanon in search of shelter yesterday as Israel pounded hundreds of terror sites, killing at least 492.

Lebanese officials said the attacks from south of the border marked the country's deadliest day since the 2006 Israeli-Hezbollah war.

Cars jammed the roads trying to escape the bombardment as fighter jets targeted stashes hiding rockets, missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles.

The Lebanese government said more than 1,600 people were injured during Monday's bombardment alone, with 'thousands' displaced from their homes and forced to seek refuge in makeshift shelters in Beirut - also under fire.

Lebanon's neighbours urged restraint while Egypt pulled flights to and from Beirut effective Tuesday. The FCDO continues to advise Britons in Lebanon to leave while flights are available - but has stopped short of ordering an evacuation.

Traffic jams form in the Lebanese city of Sidon on September 23 as people flee their homes

Emergency responders gather at the site of an Israeli strike on Beirut's southern suburbs

Video shows the aftermath of an Israeli strike in Lebanon on Monday

Cars flee north from Lebanon's southern coastal city of Sidon following Israeli bombardment

People who fled southern Lebanon villages arrive at a makeshift shelter at an educational institution in Beirut

A huge blast is seen near a residential building in southern Lebanon

Smoke rises from Israeli airstrikes on villages in the Nabatiyeh district on Monday, Sep 23

A Lebanese family, that fled their village in southern Lebanon, take refuge at a public school in the Sidon on September 23

Lebanese people flee with their cars from southern Lebanon towards Sidon and Beirut, at Zahrani-Nabatieh road, in Ghazieh, southern Lebanon, 23 September

Damage to a house and car following an Israeli airstrike near Beirut on Monday

Some 1,600 people were injured in the strikes into Lebanon on Monday

Smoke billows following an Israeli strike near the border, on Monday

As strikes pounded Beirut and the southern suburbs through Monday, Israeli Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the people of Lebanon: 'The IDF has warned you to get out of harm's way. I urge you: take this warning seriously.'

It came as Israel launched another strike on Beirut targeting Hezbollah's third in command, Ali Karaki, who heads its Southern Front. But Hezbollah last night said Ali Karaki was 'safe' and had been moved.

Hamas reported shortly after 10pm GMT that its military branch's field commander in southern Lebanon, Mahmoud al Nader, had been killed in a strike in Lebanon.

The Israel Defence Forces claimed on Monday it had taken out tens of thousands of rockets including a Russian-made DR-3 cruise missile hidden inside a civilian home as it started a 'proactive offensive operation'. 

Its strikes follow a bold attack via its pagers and walkie-talkies, which exploded injuring thousands of officers last week. 

But Islamic extremists hit back yesterday, firing more than 200 rockets, including ten long-range missiles, which hit the West Bank 60 miles over the border.

Some 500,000 Israeli children were told to stay off school in the north and ministers put the entire Jewish State on alert.

Pictures showed damage to residential homes in northern Israel where the Iron Dome had been unable to engage stray rockets fired from Lebanon. 

Hezbollah first began bombarding northern Israel to support Hamas a day after the terror group slaughtered 1,200 Jews on October 7.

Hezbollah said it will only stop its attacks if Netanyahu makes a ceasefire deal with Hamas. But negotiations have failed and the PM is applying military pressure to force Hezbollah to retreat.

As Israeli jets were scrambled first thing, Netanyahu warned Hezbollah: 'Whoever tries to hurt us, we hurt him even more.' 

Israel claimed its strikes took out 800 terror sites, but by the evening, the Lebanese health ministry reported at least 492 deaths, including 35 children.

Prime Minister Najib Mikati claimed Israel's actions amount to 'a war of extermination'. And The U.N's peacekeeping force had 'grave concern for the safety of civilians'.

'The continuing Israeli aggression on Lebanon is a war of extermination in every sense of the word and a destructive plan that aims to destroy Lebanese villages and towns,' he said. 

He urged 'the United Nations and the General Assembly and influential countries... to deter the (Israeli) aggression'.

A person films from a rooftop in Lebanon as airstrikes approach where they are standing

Terrifying footage shows a huge explosion erupting, with people heard screaming in the background

Emergency workers use excavators to clear the rubble at the site of Friday's Israeli strike in Beirut's southern suburbs

Homes in Israel are damaged following rocket attacks fired from Lebanon on Monday

Israel's Iron Dome was able to intercept some of the rockets fired towards Tiberias

Bumper-to-bumper traffic was seen as Lebanese residents evacuated southern cities including Sidon, driving towards Beirut.

As he held talks with UAE president Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, US President Joe Biden said: 'We're going to do everything we can to keep a wider war from breaking out.'

But Iran's new leader Masoud Pezeshkian warned the consequences of 'all-out conflict' would be 'irreversible'.

'We know more than anyone else that if a larger war were to erupt in the Middle East, it will not benefit anyone throughout the world,' he said.

'It is Israel that seeks to create this all-out conflict.'

Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, spokesperson for the IDF, said Israel is 'not looking for wars' but would do 'whatever is necessary' to ensure its security after months of back-and-forth with Hezbollah, based out of southern Lebanon.

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