Israeli airstrike devastates Christian Lebanese town, killing politician Pierre Mouawad

2 hours ago 12

Aerial footage shows Ain Saadeh, a Christian Lebanese town, in ruins after an Israeli airstrike on April 6 that killed anti-Hezbollah politician Pierre Mouawad, his wife, and another civilian. The Polymarket ceasefire-by-April-30 contract sits at 93.7% YES.

The strike hit a Christian area outside traditional Hezbollah strongholds, expanding the conflict’s geographic scope and increasing sectarian tensions. The April 30 ceasefire market moved from 45% to 93.7% YES over the past week. The June 30 market rose from 67% to 96.6% YES.

Daily volume for the April 30 ceasefire market is $1,041,878 in USDC. Moving the market 5 percentage points requires $50,093, which points to strong conviction among traders. The largest move was a 13-point spike at 1:16 PM, likely driven by fresh developments.

The strike suggests more aggressive Israeli tactics that could complicate ceasefire prospects. At 6¢, a NO share pays $1 if no ceasefire by April 30, a 16.67x return. Traders betting on further escalation should weigh whether Israel will continue targeting areas outside Hezbollah’s traditional territory.

Watch for IDF operational updates and any Hezbollah statements. Shifts in Israeli military strategy or Hezbollah’s response could move ceasefire odds in either direction.

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