Israel carried out fresh military operations in Lebanon on Monday as diplomats and politicians continued to struggle to find a workable ceasefire.
Loud explosions were heard in southern Beirut and other strikes hit the eastern Bekaa valley. Ground fighting was reported around Houla in the south.
UN diplomats meet again in New York on Monday to try to overcome Lebanese opposition to the text of a ceasefire.
Arab ministers also meet in Beirut to discuss a strategy on the truce.
Village deaths
Several explosions were heard early on Monday in Beirut's southern suburbs - a Hezbollah stronghold that Israel has regularly targeted.
Witnesses also reported air strikes in and around Baalbek in the Bekaa valley.
There have also been more clashes on the ground, with Israeli troops battling Hezbollah fighters in the southern Lebanese village of Houla, Lebanese sources said.
Hezbollah said it inflicted Israeli casualties but Israel has not yet commented on the fighting.
Lebanese officials say 11 civilians have been killed in the latest attacks, at least six in a strike on a house in the village of Ghazzaniyeh, south of Sidon.
The Israeli operations come a day after at least 15 people were killed in a barrage of Hezbollah rocket strikes on northern Israel.
Twelve reservist soldiers died in an attack on the town of Kfar Giladi and three people were killed in the port of Haifa.
Israel said it had destroyed Hezbollah rocket launchers around Qana and Tyre that were used to attack Haifa.
The BBC's John Simpson in Tyre says the city, which now only has around 3,000 people left, many of them poor and elderly, has been cut off by Israeli bombing.
More than 900 Lebanese and more than 80 Israelis have died in the conflict, sparked by the capture of two Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah on 12 July.
'Obstructing'
As the military operations continued, Arab foreign ministers and the head of the 22-nation Arab League, Amr Moussa, were preparing to meet in Beirut to discuss a ceasefire.
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem condemned the wording of the planned UN ceasefire resolution as a "recipe for the continuation of the war". He also warned that Damascus was ready for a regional conflict.
The UN draft does not call for the immediate pullout of Israeli forces from Lebanon.
Lebanon has submitted an amendment demanding this be included.
Mr Moussa said the "great powers were obstructing the ceasefire".
Mr Moussa was also quoted in Lebanon's As-Safir newspaper as saying there was agreement in principle among Arab countries for an emergency summit on Lebanon in Saudi Arabia this week.
In New York, Security Council members are expected to renew talks on the resolution on Monday.
A 90-minute meeting of the five permanent council members on Sunday failed to reach agreement on Lebanon's amendment, diplomats said.
"I think that means a vote on Tuesday is the more likely scenario," one diplomat from a permanent member country told Reuters.
The text calls for an immediate cessation of hostilities and lays the groundwork for a second that would install an international peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon.
Senior Israeli officials have said they are broadly happy with the text of the resolution.
An Israeli spokesman told the BBC his government could be prepared to pull all its forces out of Lebanon once the resolution was passed and when Israel had cleared what he called "the last remaining Hezbollah strongholds".
He said Israel would then monitor the south of Lebanon from behind its own border and reserve the right to use air strikes and occasional ground incursions.
The spokesman said that once a UN force had arrived Israel would in effect hand over the policing of southern Lebanon to the UN and Lebanese government.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5251370.stm