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France heatwave claims over 1,000 excess lives in three days

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France heatwave claims over 1,000 excess lives in three days

2026-06-29 21:59 Last Updated At:23:07

More than 1,000 excess deaths linked to the ongoing heatwave have been recorded in France over just three days from Wednesday to Friday, according to preliminary data released by the country's public health agency on Sunday.

The excess death count refers to the gap between the actual number of deaths and how many would have passed away under normal circumstances.

According to the agency, France registered more than 1,200 all-cause deaths on Wednesday, with daily fatalities surpassing 1,400 on both Thursday and Friday. Data for Friday remains preliminary and has not been finalized.

By comparison, the country recorded roughly 900 to 1,000 deaths per day in April and May this year.

The surge in mortality has been particularly pronounced in regions under red heat warnings, including Ile-de-France, Brittany, Centre-Val de Loire, and Normandy. The increase spans hospitals, nursing homes, and private residences, with home deaths seeing a particularly sharp rise of around 40 percent since Wednesday.

The mortality figures are based on submitted electronic death certificates and do not represent a full nationwide count. The monitoring system typically covers about 60 percent of all deaths in the country, indicating that the actual death toll is likely higher than the current published figures.

France heatwave claims over 1,000 excess lives in three days

France heatwave claims over 1,000 excess lives in three days

The framework agreement recently reached between Israel and Lebanon faces serious challenges in its implementation, according to Israeli experts.

After several days of negotiations brokered by the United States, Israel and Lebanon reached a new trilateral framework agreement aimed at ending the conflict in southern Lebanon.

The agreement was signed by the U.S., Israel and Lebanon on Friday at the U.S. State Department in Washington, D.C. It calls for the disarming of all non-governmental armed factions in Lebanon, the deployment of the Lebanese army in southern areas of the country and a complete Israeli withdrawal back to the border.

Hezbollah says it will oppose the agreement and work to defeat it politically and practically. The group did not wait long before making a very public stand.

Just minutes after the announcement in Washington, thousands of Hezbollah supporters took to the streets of the Lebanese capital Beirut late Friday vowing to stand firmly against the agreement.

Parliament members aligned with Hezbollah added that the government has no authority to sign such a deal and it will therefore never stand.

"There is no way any Lebanese government could implement any agreement signed with Israel because it doesn't have the strength, it doesn't have the means and because of Hezbollah being in the opposition and holding the government by its throat," said Dr. Jacques Neriah, an analyst for the Middle East at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu already said the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) will not withdraw from the security zone they maintain in Lebanese territory before Hezbollah is disarmed.

"It is up to the seriousness by the Lebanese military and until such time that the IDF sees that the Lebanese army is serious and can take the job, only then does Israel retreat and there are pilot projects and I think it's the best way to go about it," said Or Yissachar, executive director of Israeli think tank David Institute for Security Policy.

Israel-Lebanon agreement faces challenges in implementation: Israeli experts

Israel-Lebanon agreement faces challenges in implementation: Israeli experts

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