Medical sources reported that Israeli troops killed five Palestinians in the southern city of Khan Younis and four in the northern area of al-Faluja.
In Khan Younis, a source at Nasser Hospital informed Al Jazeera that the fatalities occurred outside the designated "yellow line" where Israeli soldiers are positioned in Gaza.
Meanwhile, the four others died when Israeli forces struck a tent sheltering displaced individuals in al-Faluja, as stated by a source at al-Shifa Hospital.
Israel provided no immediate response to these incidents.
However, the Israeli regime’s military announced in an early Sunday statement that it targeted a building in an undisclosed northern Gaza location after several armed militants entered it.
At least two of the militants were eliminated, according to the statement.
The military further claimed it killed another individual in Gaza on Sunday who reportedly crossed the yellow line and presented an "immediate threat" to its troops.
No evidence was offered to support these assertions.
Shifting to events in Lebanon, the Israeli military stated it attacked warehouses that it claimed was utilized by Hezbollah for storing arms and launchers in the country's southern regions, breaching a ceasefire agreement in November 2024.
Lebanon issued no immediate statement regarding Sunday's strikes.
According to officials in Gaza and Lebanon, the Israeli military persists with almost daily assaults despite the commitment to end hostilities.
In Gaza, Israel has infringed upon the US-brokered "ceasefire" over 1,500 times since its implementation on October 10, resulting in at least 591 deaths and 1,590 injuries.
Beyond the ongoing fatalities among Palestinians, Israel also tightly limits the entry of food, medicine, medical supplies, shelter materials, and prefabricated homes into Gaza, where approximately 2 million residents—including 1.5 million displaced—endure dire conditions.
Israel began its genocidal war on Gaza on October 8, 2023, backed by the US, killing up to 72,032 people and wounding 171,661 more, and destroying 90 percent of the area's infrastructure.
The United Nations projects that reconstructing Gaza could exceed $70 billion in costs.
In Lebanon, the Israeli military has conducted more than 10,000 air and ground operations in the year following the ceasefire agreement, based on UN data.
The UN's rights office reported in November last year that it confirmed at least 108 civilian deaths from Israeli strikes since the ceasefire, including at least 21 women and 16 children.
Additionally, at least 11 Lebanese civilians were taken by Israeli forces during that timeframe, the office noted.