The Phnom Penh Post

Israel, Hamas reach truce

- Sakher Abou El Oun

Israel unleashed its biggest airstrikes on the Gaza Strip since a 2014 war on Saturday, killing two Palestinia­ns, while dozens of rockets targeted Israel, but Hamas said a ceasefire had been reached late in the day.

The exchange of fire followed months of tension that has raised the prospect of a fourth war in the blockaded Gaza Strip since 2008.

Three Israelis were wounded when a rocket hit a house in the city of Sderot near the Gaza Strip, authoritie­s said.

The two Palestinia­ns killed were aged 15 and 16, caught in an Israeli strike on a building they were near in the west of Gaza City, the enclave’s health ministry added.

Twenty-five people were wounded across Gaza, the ministry said.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said late on Saturday the Islamist movement,

which runs the Gaza Strip, had agreed to an “Egyptian offer to return to a ceasefire to stop this escalation”.

An Israeli military spokesman declined to comment, but said its actions would depend on what happens on the ground.

Thick plumes of smoke rose over parts of the Gaza Strip as Israel hit dozens of targets it said belonged to militants, including a high-rise building allegedly used by Hamas as a training facility with a tunnel underneath.

In Israel, air raid sirens sent people rushing to shelters in areas surroundin­g the Gaza Strip as rockets and mortars were fired from the Palestinia­n enclave at nearby communitie­s.

Israel said around 100 rockets and mortars were fired, mostly mortars.

Hamas said it fired in defence in response to Israeli airstrikes.

Israel blamed Hamas for the escalation, pointing to months of protests and clashes along the border that its military argues the Islamist movement is seeking to use as cover for attacks.

There have also been hundreds of fires at Israeli farms caused by kites and balloons carrying firebombs from Gaza, leading to political pressure on the government and military to take action against Hamas.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Hamas had been hit with “the hardest blow” since a 2014 war “and we will increase the strength of our attacks as necessary”.

Hamas’s Barhoum said the group was responsibl­e for the barrage and that it was carried out “in response to the Israeli airstrikes”.

“The protection and the defence of our people is a national duty and a strategic choice,” Barhoum said.

Tensions have been building between Hamas and Israel for months over mass protests and clashes along the border fence.

The protests have called for Palestinia­n refugees to able to return to their former homes now inside Israel.

Since the protests and clashes broke out on March 30, at least 141 Palestinia­ns have been killed by Israeli fire. The majority killed were involved in protests and clashes, but others were seeking to breach or damage the border fence. No Israelis have been killed. In addition, the arson balloons and kites from Gaza have caused 750 fires and burned 2,600 hectares, leading to hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage, according to Israel’s fire service.

On July 9, Israel closed its only goods crossing with the Gaza Strip in response to the fires.

Hamas called the move a “crime against humanity”, with Gaza already suffering from deep poverty and worsening humanitari­an conditions.

The border protests peaked on May 14, when the United States moved its Israel embassy to the disputed city of Jerusalem, but have continued at a lower level since then.

On Friday, Israeli troops shot and killed two Palestinia­ns, including a teenager, and wounded hundreds of others in border clashes.

An Israeli soldier was also moderately wounded when a grenade was thrown at him from the northern Gaza Strip, the military said.

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 ?? MAHMUD HAMS/AFP ?? Palestinia­n boys walk through the ruins of a building that was damaged by Israeli air strikes in Gaza City on Sunday.
MAHMUD HAMS/AFP Palestinia­n boys walk through the ruins of a building that was damaged by Israeli air strikes in Gaza City on Sunday.

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