Israeli Police say the fall of ammunition in the Judean Hills area near Jerusalem has injured 12 people. Officials and volunteers continue to operate at the scene, they write on X.
The Times of Israel reports that the country's air force will investigate the failure to shoot down the ballistic missile that made impact.
On the first day of the US-Israeli war with Iran, a strike hit Shajareh Tayyebeh school, located in Minab, southern Iran.
It killed at least 168 people, including about 110 children, according to Iranian officials. Funerals were held for the victims on Iranian state TV.
The girls school was located near an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) base which has previously been a target.
Following the attack, Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian called the incident a "barbaric act", adding to the "countless crimes committed by the aggressors".
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it was "not aware" of any Israeli military operations in the area.
Weeks later, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said the US did not target civilians, and the issue was being investigated.
US media have reported that US military investigators believe American forces were likely responsible for hitting the school unintentionally - but that they have not reached a final conclusion.
Since then, UN Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk has urged the US to conclude its investigation and publish its findings on the deadly attack.
A clinic located close to the Shajareh Tayyebeh Primary School in Minab county - which was hit on the first day of the war - has been attacked, an Iranian official has said.
The Political, Security, and Social Deputy Governor Ahmad Nafisi, of the southern Hormozgan province, says the attack caused "damage to the storage facilities" at the Martyr Absalan Clinic.
Iran's Fars News Agency, which is affiliated to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), cites Nafisi as saying the US and Israel used "several drones" in the attack on the medical complex.
"Fortunately, this attack did not lead to any casualties," he says, adding an investigation into the extent of the attack is under way.
The area had been evacuated following the fatal strike on the primary school on 28 February - when the US and Israel launched their offensive against Iran. Iranian officials say the attack on the school involved two missile strikes in quick succession, killing at least 168 people, including about 110 children.
US media have reported that American military investigators believe its own forces were likely responsible for hitting the school unintentionally, while US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has said the matter is being investigated.
Nafisi adds: "Today the whole world knows that the area targeted by the enemy is by no means military, yet we are once again witnessing an attack on this area, which clearly proves the deliberate nature of the attack on Shajareh Tayebeh School in Minab and the killing of 168 pupils and teachers."Three Lebanese journalists have been killed in a targeted Israeli strike on their media car in southern Lebanon, local media is reporting.
Ali Shoeib, reporter for Al Manar TV - a network operated by militant group Hezbollah - and Al Mayadin reporters Fatima and Mohamed Fetoni were killed in an air strike in the town of Jezzine.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun condemned the attack as a "blatant crime" that violates international law under which journalists should be protected during war.
Israel's military has confirmed it killed Ali Shoeib in a strike, but accuses him of being a Hezbollah-operative posing as a journalist.
This is the second time Israel has been accused of targeting journalists in Lebanon since the war broke out Last week, Mohammad Sherri - a prominent presenter at Al Manar TV - and his wife were killed in a targeted strike.
So far, more than 1100 civilians, including 120 Children and 42 paramedics, have been killed in Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon.
Many in Lebanon are worried that Israel is using similar tactics which it has been accused of deploying in Gaza - including the deliberate targeting of civilians, journalists and paramedics, which Israel has denied.

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