Los Angeles Times

Israel strikes Gaza after soldier’s death

The deadly attack comes after sniper fire kills a soldier during latest border protest.

- By Noga Tarnopolks­y and Hana Salah

Widespread airstrikes target Hamas military positions following a border sniper attack on an Israeli soldier. Four Palestinia­ns are killed.

GAZA CITY — In the sharpest escalation of violence in weeks, Israel carried out widespread and fatal airstrikes in the Gaza Strip on Friday, which the Israelis said were in response to attacks on its soldiers.

Before the assault, sniper fire killed an Israeli soldier along the Gaza-Israeli border, the first Israeli to die in months of conflict that have claimed the lives of more than 140 Palestinia­ns.

At least four more Palestinia­ns were killed in Friday’s bloodshed, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, three of them members of the militant Islamist group Hamas, which controls the enclave. About 120 others were injured, most of them protesters suffering from tear gas exposure.

Beaches were evacuated throughout southern Israel, sirens wailed, and those attending Friday night prayer services were told not to fill synagogues beyond capacity amid the violence, which each side blamed on the other.

The Israeli military said it struck dozens of Hamas targets — including warehouses, aerial defense systems and observatio­n posts — after its soldiers came under gun and grenade fire. It also said it had identified three rockets aimed at Israel, two of which were intercepte­d by the country’s Iron Dome defense system.

“An event of this sort we cannot tolerate,” Israeli army spokesman Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus told journalist­s, blaming Hamas for provoking the violent response.

Hamas evacuated command posts and told residents to shelter in place. It said Israel was the aggressor and vowed that the weekly protests along the border would continue, including flying kites with incendiary devices attached that have set fire to Israeli cropland and forests.

Streets emptied as loud explosions reverberat­ed across the strip.

Suha Mofeed, a 19-yearold mother of two, was visiting her parents when the Israeli attacks began.

“We were sitting on the roof when the sky turned to red,” she said. “I was afraid for my children. I took them and we went inside our home.

“I hate to hear the explosions. It reminds me of the 2014 war, when I lost my best friend,” she continued. “I don’t want to witness another war.”

The border protests started in March and reached a peak in May, when the United States inaugurate­d its new embassy in Jerusalem, a move seen as a provocatio­n by Palestinia­ns. But demonstrat­ions have continued as the Palestinia­ns press their decadeslon­g demand to return to villages and homes their families f led when the state of Israel was created 70 years ago.

Thousands of Palestinia­ns took part in Friday’s protests at a number of sites along the Israeli-Gaza border.

The Israeli offensive began after nightfall as the military launched airstrikes and fired tanks at Hamas military installati­ons.

In a statement, the Israeli army said, “Hamas chose to escalate the security situation — and will bear the consequenc­es for its actions. Troops are on high alert and will continue to operate in order to ensure the safety of Israeli civilians.”

A senior Israeli military officer told the news site Ynet that the violence was “the worst event since the end of the 2014 Gaza war,” adding that “Hamas is responsibl­e.”

Shortly after midnight, a Hamas spokesman, Fawzi Barhoum, announced a cease-fire. “Through Egyptian and internatio­nal efforts we have agreed to return to the previous state of calm between the occupation and the Palestinia­n factions,” he said.

There was no immediate confirmati­on from the Israelis.

Earlier Friday, Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Gadi Eizenkot and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened a special meeting of top military and security officials at the Defense Ministry’s headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv.

Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman warned that Hamas was dragging Israel into a “broad, painful military operation” larger than the last Gaza war, in 2014.

“We are trying to be measured and responsibl­e,” he said while visiting the southern city of Sderot, a frequent target of mortar and rocket fire from Gaza.

“Unfortunat­ely,” he said, “Gaza’s residents will be among those who will have to pay the price.”

Lieberman mentioned the possibilit­y of easing the punishing economic blockade in Gaza, which Israel and Egypt have maintained since Hamas’ takeover of the territory in 2007, in exchange for “a total cessation of terror and provocatio­ns at the [border] fence.”

The escalation Friday broke out almost four years after the capture and killing of two Israeli soldiers, Oron Shaul and Hadar Goldin, whose remains are still held by Hamas.

On Friday, Hamas senior leader Khalil Hayya said that Israeli soldiers captured in Gaza “will not see the light until Israel has paid the price.”

“Your soldiers are in our hands, and you will not see them unless you pay the price,” he said during a Friday sermon at the funeral ceremony for Qasami Abdel Karim Radwan, a militant killed during the clashes.

Special correspond­ents Tarnopolsk­y reported from Jerusalem and Salah from Gaza City. Times staff writer Alexandra Zavis in Beirut contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Bashar Taleb AFP/Getty Images ?? A FIREBALL rises over Gaza City during Friday’s Israeli bombardmen­t, a sharp escalation in the violence.
Bashar Taleb AFP/Getty Images A FIREBALL rises over Gaza City during Friday’s Israeli bombardmen­t, a sharp escalation in the violence.
 ?? Anas Baba AFP/Getty Images ?? PALESTINIA­NS carry the body of protester Mohammed Badwan, who was shot by Israeli forces.
Anas Baba AFP/Getty Images PALESTINIA­NS carry the body of protester Mohammed Badwan, who was shot by Israeli forces.

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