by: Isabel Kershner
JERUSALEM – Palestinian militants from Gaza fired a barrage of rockets and mortar shells into Israeli territory on Monday, causing no casualties but some property damage, after an Israeli airstrike wounded at least 10 Palestinians in southern Gaza on Sunday.
Israeli warplanes responded immediately, striking a number of rocket-launching squads as they fired toward Israel, according to the military, and hitting several facilities belonging to Hamas, the Islamic group that controls Gaza, which the military said were being used to store weapons.
JERUSALEM – Palestinian militants from Gaza fired a barrage of rockets and mortar shells into Israeli territory on Monday, causing no casualties but some property damage, after an Israeli airstrike wounded at least 10 Palestinians in southern Gaza on Sunday.
Israeli warplanes responded immediately, striking a number of rocket-launching squads as they fired toward Israel, according to the military, and hitting several facilities belonging to Hamas, the Islamic group that controls Gaza, which the military said were being used to store weapons.
Ashraf al-Qedra, a spokesman for the Health Ministry in Gaza, said that
five Palestinians were injured in Monday’s strikes, one of them
seriously.
The latest flare-up began with the missile strike on Sunday against two
men who Israel said were members of jihadist groups involved in
terrorist activity against Israel. Some Palestinian news outlets
identified the two men as members of radical Salafist groups. Gaza
medical officials said that the two, who were struck while riding on a
motorcycle, were critically wounded, and that at least eight passers-by
were also injured.
A spokeswoman for the Israeli military said that up to 30 mortar shells
had fallen inside Israel on Monday morning, and the military said that a
number of rockets also struck Israeli territory near the Gaza border.
The armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, a smaller militant group,
claimed responsibility for the rocket and mortar fire, saying that they
were aiming at Israeli military bases near the border.
A spokesman for the military wing of Hamas, known only by his nom de
guerre, Abu Obeida, said that Monday’s attacks were meant as “a message”
that “the Palestinian resistance will not allow unilateral aggression”
from Israel. He warned of “stronger, expanded responses” if the Israeli
raids continued.
Most of the rockets and mortars fell in uninhabited areas in Israel, but
the military said that some buildings were damaged. Several goats were
killed in a petting zoo in an Israeli communal farm near the border,
according to the news Web site Ynet.
Israelis were marking the last day of the Sukkot holiday on Monday, and
schools and offices were closed. Israelis near the Gaza border were
advised to remain close to bomb shelters and protected areas. The
Education Ministry in Gaza said that four schools in southeast Gaza were
evacuated because of Israeli shelling in the area.
Hamas has largely adhered to an informal, if fragile, cease-fire with
Israel and has acted in the past to rein in smaller groups, but this was
the second time in less than four months that Hamas joined in firing
rockets at Israel.
In June, the armed wing of Hamas joined Islamic Jihad in firing barrages
of rockets into Israel after a number of deadly Israeli airstrikes.
Analysts said at the time that Hamas was acting out of a sense that
Islamic Jihad was gaining ground, and after Gaza residents criticized
Hamas for not avenging Israeli strikes.
Then, three days of cross-border fighting ended when Egypt brokered a
restoration of the cease-fire and Hamas renewed its commitment to the
truce.
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