Cape Argus

Israel PM visits town rocked by violence

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JERUSALEM: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited a southern Israeli town bordering Gaza yesterday that was pummelled with rockets over the weekend from the strip, and told community leaders there that Israel was engaged in a “lengthy battle”.

Netanyahu’s visit to Sderot comes a day after an informal ceasefire took hold to end 24 hours of intense fighting with Gaza’s Hamas militants that had threatened to devolve into all-out war.

Israel pounded Hamas targets in its biggest bombardmen­t since the 2014 war, while militants fired dozens of rockets towards Israel that halted daily life in the area.

Two Palestinia­n teenagers were killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, while four Israelis were wounded from a rocket that landed on a residentia­l home in Sderot.

Netanyahu visited a local kindergart­en and pledged that Israel would put an end to the rocket fire and a Gaza militant campaign of sending incendiary kites and balloons across the border that have ignited fires damaging Israeli farms and nature reserves.

Hamas will face a “wall of steel” if it keeps up its aggression against Israel, Netanyahu warned, adding however that the threat would not disappear overnight.

“It doesn’t end in one strike,” Netanyahu said. “We know we are engaged in a lengthy battle.”

On Saturday, the Israeli military struck several Hamas military compounds and flattened a number of its training camps. Hamas fired more than 200 rockets and mortars towards Israeli communitie­s.

After Hamas accepted an Egypt-mediated ceasefire late on Saturday, the situation calmed, but flaming kites and balloons continued to waft over into Israel, with the military signalling a new policy of striking back immediatel­y.

The government is under pressure from local communitie­s to show zero tolerance to this new threat, and Netanyahu told local leaders he has instructed the military to halt it completely.

“There is no such thing as a ceasefire that does not include the flaming kites and balloons,” he said.

“If this is not understood through my words, it will be understood through the military’s actions.”

On Sunday night, the military announced that following a “situation assessment” it reinforced its Iron Dome batteries in central Israel and in the country’s south and called up a small number of reserve army soldiers. The Iron Dome shot down more than 20 projectile­s over the weekend.

Israel says it is defending its border and accuses Hamas of using the protests as cover for attempts to breach the border fence and attack Israeli civilians and soldiers.

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