By Christina Goldbaum, Isabel Kershner, Euan Ward and Thomas Fuller NYTimes News Service
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DAMASCUS, Syria — The fragile ceasefires in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip were tested Sunday as Israeli forces killed scores of people in southern Lebanon, Lebanese officials said, while in Gaza, Israel prevented Palestinians from moving back to their homes, saying Hamas had violated the terms of the truce.

But by the end of the day in Gaza, Israel and Hamas said understandings had been reached via mediators to resolve their dispute.

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And the White House issued a statement indicating that in Lebanon, an arrangement for an initial 60-day truce that had called for the full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the southern part of the country by Sunday would be extended until Feb. 18.

Negotiators had hoped that the ceasefire in Lebanon, which was signed in November, would become permanent by now, securing a measure of calm in a turbulent region. Thousands of Lebanese displaced by the war have poured onto roads leading south, heading back to their homes.

But as the original deadline passed on Sunday for the withdrawal of Israeli troops and the forces of the militant group Hezbollah from southern Lebanon, a very different scenario was taking shape. Lebanon’s Health Ministry said Israeli forces killed at least 22 people and injured 120 in southern Lebanon, making Sunday the deadliest day in the country since the war ended in November.

The Israeli military said in a statement late Sunday that it had fired “warning shots in order to eliminate threats” — a formulation that suggested the shots may have been more than just warnings. It said that there had been “dozens of rioters” in the area. The military also said its soldiers had spotted a “vehicle with Hezbollah flags” and that its forces had “operated in order to remove the threat.”

In recent days, Israeli officials have expressed concerns that Hezbollah remains active in southern Lebanon and it has doubts about the Lebanese army’s ability to rein in the group.

Those claims could not be independently verified. The five-member committee overseeing the implementation of the ceasefire has not publicly released any information regarding Hezbollah’s compliance with the terms of the truce.

The White House statement Sunday made no specific mention of Hezbollah or of Israel’s military presence in southern Lebanon. It did say that the governments of Lebanon, Israel and the United States would begin negotiations for the return of Lebanese prisoners captured after the Hamas attack on Israel in October 2023 that prompted the regional war.

There was no immediate comment from Israel, the Lebanese government or Hezbollah.

United Nations peacekeeping forces in Lebanon, known as UNIFIL, warned in a statement Sunday that it was “imperative to avoid further deterioration of the situation.” It called on the Israeli military to avoid firing at civilians, and for Lebanese to adhere to the directives of Lebanon’s military.

“Further violence risks undermining the fragile security situation,” the statement said.

In its statement late Sunday, the Israeli military said it was “determined to continue to operate in accordance with the understanding between Israel and Lebanon, despite Hezbollah’s attempts to return to southern Lebanon.”

Tens of thousands of Israelis who were evacuated from their homes in northern Israel 15 months ago have been reluctant to return, fearing cross-border attacks from Hezbollah.

In the Gaza Strip on Sunday, civilians displaced by war were likewise stymied from returning to their homes. Israeli troops prevented them from doing so after Israeli officials accused Hamas of violating the terms of the ceasefire agreement that went into effect a week ago.

Under the terms of the initial phase of the Gaza ceasefire agreed to this month, Israel had been expected to withdraw some of its forces and allow hundreds of thousands of uprooted Palestinians to head north after a second hostage and prisoner exchange Saturday.

The Israeli government said Hamas had violated the deal by not adhering to the agreed order of hostage releases and by failing to provide Israel with information about the status of the captives still in Gaza who were seized when the militants attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

The dispute centered around one particular hostage, Arbel Yehud, an Israeli civilian. Yehud was supposed to be among the women released Saturday as part of an exchange for Palestinians being held in Israeli prisons. Israel had demanded that its female civilians be released before female soldiers were.

But on Saturday, four soldiers were released in exchange for 200 Palestinian prisoners.

Hussein al-Batsh, an official of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a smaller armed organization and sometime rival of Hamas in Gaza, told The New York Times on Sunday that Yehud was in the custody of the Quds Brigades, the group’s military wing. He said that Yehud was not released Saturday for “technical reasons.”

After a day of feverish talks to resolve the crisis, Qatar, one of the main mediators between Israel and Hamas, said close to midnight Sunday that Hamas would hand over Yehud and two other hostages before next Friday, in addition to handing over three other hostages Saturday.

Israel confirmed that Yehud would be released Thursday along with Agam Berger, an Israeli soldier, and one other hostage. Israel also said it had received a long-awaited list from Hamas providing details about the status of the remaining 26 hostages due to be released in the first phase of the deal.

In return, Israel said it would allow the passage of Palestinians to northern Gaza, starting Monday morning.

On Sunday, images of a large crowd of displaced Palestinians waiting near the Netzarim corridor — a zone built by Israeli forces that splits Gaza in two — to return north were circulating in Palestinian media.

Wafa, the Palestinian Authority’s news agency, reported that one person had been killed and several others were wounded west of Nuseirat in central Gaza after Israeli forces fired at the crowd of people waiting to return north. The Israeli military said its troops had fired warning shots at several gatherings of Palestinians in central Gaza, describing them in a statement as “suspects who were advancing toward the troops and posed a threat to them.”

One Palestinian, Ghada al-Kurd, 37, said she had chosen to remain in central Gaza on Sunday despite longing to return to her home in the north. “I will not risk my life,” she said. “Those soldiers cannot be trusted.”

Al-Kurd, who left her home and her two daughters behind in Gaza City in the early weeks of the war, was once again left wondering when she would finally get to see them. “Here we are just waiting, feeling stressed and anxious,” she said. “They are playing with our fate,” she added.

Similar sentiments were expressed among the thousands of Lebanese who were attempting to return home to towns and villages along the Israeli border, despite warnings by the Lebanese and Israeli militaries that it was not yet safe to do so.

The crisis poses a critical test for Lebanon’s new leaders, President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister-designate Nawaf Salam, as they seek to wrest back some political control from Hezbollah and build a functioning state.

Experts warn that any prolonged Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon could breathe new life into Hezbollah, a group that was founded to liberate Lebanon from Israeli occupation and that has portrayed itself as the only force capable of protecting Lebanon’s borders.

“As long as Israel is occupying Lebanon, it’s reviving the narrative of Hezbollah,” said Sami Nader, the director of the Institute of Political Science at Saint Joseph University of Beirut.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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