Times Colonist

Israeli strikes kill two after Gaza rocket attack

- FARES AKRAM and ARON HELLER

GAZA, Palestinia­n Territory — Israeli airstrikes killed two Hamas members on Saturday following a rocket attack on Israel, in the latest fallout from U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital — a developmen­t that has roiled the region and the larger Muslim world.

The Israeli military said it targeted four Hamas facilities in response to rockets fired the previous night, including one that landed in the town of Sderot without causing casualties or major damage. The military said it struck warehouses and weapons manufactur­ing sites, after which Hamas said it had recovered the bodies of two of its men.

Israel considers Hamas responsibl­e for all rocket fire emanating from Gaza, which is home to other armed groups. Some residents of Sderot and other border towns spent the night in shelters, fearful of rocket attacks from Gaza that have led to three Israel-Hamas wars over the past decade.

Protests and demonstrat­ions continued across the West Bank and Gaza on Saturday on the third and final so-called Palestinia­n “day of rage” following Trump’s announceme­nt. The military said there were clashes in 20 locations. In Bethlehem, Palestinia­ns hurled stones at Israeli troops, who responded with tear gas, rubber bullets and stun grenades. The Israeli military said some 600 Palestinia­ns were throwing firebombs and rolling burning tires toward Israeli forces. It said it dispersed the crowds and arrested six rioters.

Along the border with the Gaza Strip, about 450 Palestinia­ns clashed with Israeli troops at eight locations. About 20 were wounded. About 4,000 demonstrat­ors gathered in Gaza City and demonstrat­ions resumed in Pakistan, Turkey and elsewhere across the Muslim world.

In Jerusalem, police forces — some on horseback — scuffled with protesters near the Old City and arrested 13 people who were involved in what they called an illegal protest. Four policemen were slightly injured.

“Trump cannot take what he doesn’t have,” said Zuheir Dana, a protester from east Jerusalem.

In a first, violence spilled into Israel itself, with Arab protesters blocking a major highway in the northern part of the country and hurling rocks at a bus and motorcycle rider, injuring two slightly. Israel has mobilized troops in case further violence breaks out. However, the clashes in the West Bank and east Jerusalem have yet to claim lives or spiral into the level of violence some had feared following Trump’s move.

On Saturday there was a drop in the scope of the protests after clashes erupted the day before between Palestinia­n protesters and Israeli troops in dozens of West Bank hotspots and along the Gaza border. Two Palestinia­ns were shot and killed in Gaza and dozens were wounded in the West Bank. In Jerusalem, Friday prayers at Islam’s third-holiest site dispersed largely without incident. Crowds of worshipper­s across the Muslim world staged anti-U.S. marches Friday, some stomping on posters of Trump or burning American flags.

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