Kashmir Observer

Explosive Situation In Gaza Following Friday’s Bloodbath

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GAZA CITY: Israeli jets have pounded the besieged Gaza Strip for a second day following a wave of air strikes on the coastal enclave that killed at least 15 people, including a five-year-old girl and a commander of a Palestinia­n armed group.

The fighting, which began on Friday with Israel’s targeted killing of a senior commander of the Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad, continued throughout the night, drawing the sides closer to an all-out war.

Israel struck Gaza and Palestinia­ns fired rockets at Israeli cities on Saturday after an Israeli operation against Islamic Jihad ended more than a year of relative calm along the border.

Israel on Friday killed one of the group’s senior commanders in a surprise daytime airstrike on a high-rise building in Gaza City that drew rocket salvoes in response.

Also on Saturday, Gaza’s sole power plant shut down after running out of fuel, an electricit­y company spokesman said, five days after Israel closed its goods crossing with the Palestinia­n enclave. Additional bombings targeted five houses, witnesses said, sending huge clouds of smoke and debris into the air as explosions rocked Gaza City.

Palestinia­n militants fired at least 160 rockets across the border, setting off air-raid sirens and sending people running to bomb shelters as far as the central Israeli city of Modiin, between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

Islamic Jihad said it had targeted Israel’s main internatio­nal gateway, Ben Gurion Airport. But the rocket fell short near Modiin, around 20 km away, and the Civil Aviation Authority said the airport was operating as usual with flight routes adjusted.

Most of the missiles were intercepte­d and there were no reports of serious casualties, according to the Israeli ambulance service.

Friday’s strikes killed more than a dozen Palestinia­ns including 5-yearold Alaa, who lived in the Shejaiya neighborho­od in eastern Gaza.Her grandfathe­r Riyad Qaddoum said: “What was the fault of this child? She was a kindergart­en pupil who only needed a paper, a pencil and a school uniform.” She was killed while playing in the street.

Israel launched the military operation, called Breaking Dawn, against Islamic Jihad on Friday afternoon with the assassinat­ion of Taysir Al-Jabari, a senior commander, in an apartment in Palestine Tower.

Al-Quds Brigades, the armed wing of Islamic Jihad, began firing missiles from the Gaza Strip toward Israeli cities and towns at 9 p.m. on Friday.

“The enemy bears full responsibi­lity ... We will not be lenient in responding to this aggression, which represents a declaratio­n of war against our people,” Islamic Jihad said in a statement.

“We call on all the resistance forces and their military wings to stand in one front and one trench to respond to this aggression and confront this terrorism.”

Hamas, which governs Gaza, has not officially announced its participat­ion in firing rockets at Israel, but it has condemned the Israeli strikes.

Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said in a statement that this round of fighting “is part of our great ongoing battle with the occupation, which will not stop unless the goals of our people are achieved with liberation and return.”

Around 2.3 million Palestinia­ns are packed into the narrow coastal Gaza Strip, with Israel and Egypt tightly restrictin­g movement of people and goods in and out of the enclave and imposing a naval blockade, citing security concerns.

Israel stopped the planned transport of fuel into Gaza shortly before it struck on Friday, crippling the territory’s lone power plant, reducing electricit­y to around eight hours per day, and drawing warnings from health officials that hospitals would be severely impacted within days.

Dozens of Gazans queued up in front of bakeries and grocery stores, fearing that the escalation could continue for a long time. “We couldn’t sleep all last night. The shelling was heavy and the explosions were very loud, and we don’t know how long this escalation will last and how many days we’ll suffer. I hope it ends soon,” said Rami Khudair, queueing in a bakery.

Israel closed the Erez crossing for individual­s and the Kerem Shalom commercial crossing last week, following the arrest of Islamic Jihad leader Bassam Al-Saadi in the Palestinia­n city of Jenin in the northern West Bank.

The Palestinia­n Ministry of Health warned that its health services would be suspended within 72 hours due to the acute shortage of medicines and medical supplies, in addition to the lack of fuel to operate electricit­y generators in Palestinia­n hospitals.

“The coming hours are critical and difficult,” the ministry said in a statement. Egyptian, UN and Qatari efforts to end the fighting are underway. Further escalation would largely depend on whether Hamas opts to join the fighting.

On Friday night, the Israeli military said it had apprehende­d 19 Islamic Jihad militants in raids in the Israeliocc­upied West Bank while targeting the group’s rocket-manufactur­ing sites and launchers in Gaza.Gaza streets were largely deserted on Saturday afternoon.

At the site where Al-Jabari was killed, rubble, glass and furniture were strewn along the street.A neighbor, Mariam Abu Ghanima, 56, said the Israeli military did not issue a warning before the attack, as it had done in previous rounds of violence.A spokespers­on for the military said it had made efforts to avoid civilian casualties in the surprise attack, which had used precision means to target a specific floor of the building, Reuters reported.

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