Los Angeles Times

Militants in Gaza fire barrage at Israel

Rocket attack is the biggest in years. Then they claim they have agreed to a cease-fire.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y and Hana Salah Special correspond­ents Tarnopolsk­y and Salah reported from Jerusalem and Gaza City, respective­ly.

JERUSALEM — Sirens rang in southern Israeli cities and towns throughout Tuesday as a barrage of mortar rounds and rockets was launched from the Gaza Strip — followed by an announceme­nt by Palestinia­n militants that they had agreed to a cease-fire.

The assault was believed to be the biggest of its kind in four years.

Israeli police said militants from the Islamic Jihad group fired 130 projectile­s, apparently in retaliatio­n for Israel’s killing of three guerrillas Sunday. The Israeli military gave a lower figure of 70.

The three guerrillas were killed after a bomb was planted on the Israel-Gaza border fence, the site of weeks of Palestinia­n protest.

On Tuesday, seven Israelis, including three soldiers, were wounded and hospitaliz­ed after being hit by shrapnel from missiles intercepte­d by the Iron Dome defense system.

The Israeli army said it had struck back against more than 30 Gaza military targets belonging to the ruling Hamas militant group and Islamic Jihad, including “a terror tunnel penetratin­g half a mile into Israel via Egypt.”

According to Israeli police, the Iron Dome intercepte­d about half of the projectile­s, which had been launched from Khan Yunis, a city in southern Gaza, toward cities in the Negev desert. Other missiles failed to detonate or landed in unpopulate­d areas.

Late Tuesday night, a spokesman for Islamic Jihad, Daoud Shehab, appeared on Al Jazeera television and said the group had agreed to an Egyptian-brokered cease-fire beginning at midnight. “We are committed as long as Israel is committed to it,” he said.

However, there was no confirmati­on from Egypt and no immediate response from Israel.

Earlier, Israeli residents living in border communitie­s had been instructed to remain within a 10-second range of air raid shelters. One rocket landed next to a kindergart­en in the early morning, and shrapnel damaged several cars in the city of Sderot later.

Israeli army spokesman Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus said the escalation marked the “largest amount of rockets and mortars fired at Israel since 2014,” when a summer war between Israel and Hamas, the Islamist group ruling Gaza, cost the lives of more than 2,000 Palestinia­ns and 70 Israelis, most of them soldiers.

Late Tuesday, in a rare joint statement, Hamas and Islamic Jihad accepted responsibi­lity for the daylong salvo against Israel. “The gunfire is a response to Israeli aggression and crimes against the Palestinia­n people,” they said.

Israeli army spokesman Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis described the barrage as “a different form of terror attack against Israel that we have no intention to permit” after what he described as the failure of Hamas to penetrate Israel, harm Israelis or bring any benefit to its own population during two months of demonstrat­ions. He blamed Iran for its financial support of Islamic Jihad.

Since March, thousands of Gazans have gathered at the border weekly to protest a growing humanitari­an crisis in what they often describe as the world’s largest open-air prison. The Gaza Strip, an overcrowde­d coastal enclave, has been held under an Israeli and Egyptian blockade since Hamas took control of the area from the Palestinia­n Authority more than a decade ago.

About 115 Gazans have died in clashes with the Israeli army since the protests began, and Israel has faced internatio­nal condemnati­on for its use of sharpshoot­ers.

Tuesday, however, was the first time rockets or missiles have been aimed at Israel since the start of the confrontat­ions.

As a new wave of air raid sirens sounded along the 32mile border well into the night, the rumble of air force jets provided a constant background noise to Israelis living in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. Manelis said that Israel did not intend to escalate but that continued rocket and mortar attacks “will only draw a more forceful response.”

Manelis said the long fusillade proved that “Hamas is losing control of Gaza,” adding that “terror of any type will be met with great force.”

For the last two months, Hamas has maintained that the massive weekly protests are nonviolent. The Israeli army has released images of protesters using weapons ranging from slingshots to submachine guns, and numerous attempts to breach the border with knives or bombs, to prove the contrary.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who called for an urgent meeting of his top security team for Tuesday evening, posted a fiery red poster emblazoned with a message in capital letters on his Twitter account.

“PEACEFUL PROTESTS?” he asked. “THIS MORNING DOZENS OF MISSILES WERE FIRED FROM GAZA TOWARDS ISRAELI CITIZENS (INCLUDING A KINDERGART­EN). SHARE THE TRUTH.”

Shehab, the Islamic Jihad spokesman, said the rockets constitute­d “a blessed response from our resistance.”

“We will continue to defend our people everywhere,” he said in an interview. “The resistance has the right to respond to the crimes of the occupation.”

No Gazans were reported wounded.

In a planned action, a fleet of more than 30 small boats carrying two students and several medical patients set sail from Gaza in an attempt to symbolical­ly break the sea blockade. Gazan hospitals have reported they are at a breaking point after two months in which they have been overwhelme­d with thousands of injuries.

The Israeli navy detained and boarded a boat about 5.5 miles into Mediterran­ean waters, towing it to the Israeli port of Ashdod.

The Israeli army said in a statement that “the Hamas terror organizati­on, who is behind this attempt to breach the naval blockade, is trying to carry out a propaganda operation whilst cynically using its people for that purpose.”

Adham Abu Salmiya, a spokesman for the f lotilla organizers, announced the launch of “a second freedom boat soon.”

Matthias Schmale, the Gaza director for the principal United Nations organizati­on charged with supporting Palestinia­n refugees in Gaza, on Twitter lamented the “very worrying continuous firing of rockets back & forth between Israel and #Gaza all day.”

That drew a withering response from Emmanuel Nahshon, the spokesman for Israel’s Foreign Ministry. He tweeted that “the gold medal for blind hypocrisy” went to an agency “not willing, or afraid, to admit the difference between the aggressor (Hamas and its consorts) and the country protecting its citizens against aggression.”

 ?? Thomas Coex AFP/Getty Images ?? SMOKE BILLOWS in Gaza City after an Israeli airstrike. The Israeli army said it targeted more than 30 military sites in the Gaza Strip in response to the barrage of rockets and mortar rounds from the enclave. “Terror of any type will be met with great...
Thomas Coex AFP/Getty Images SMOKE BILLOWS in Gaza City after an Israeli airstrike. The Israeli army said it targeted more than 30 military sites in the Gaza Strip in response to the barrage of rockets and mortar rounds from the enclave. “Terror of any type will be met with great...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States