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Monday 23 November 2009 (05 Dhul Hijjah 1430)

 
10 hurt in Israeli strikes on Gaza
Agencies
 

JERUSALEM: At least 10 Palestinians were injured in three successive Israeli airstrikes overnight and early Sunday on the southern, central and northern Gaza Strip, medical officials said. They said the aircraft fired two air-to-ground missiles at the borderline area between southern Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula, completely destroying three tunnels used for smuggling.

Mo’aweya Hassanein, the head of the Gaza Strip emergency services, told reporters that at least five Palestinians were injured in this attack. Five Palestinians were wounded in the two other airstrikes, he said. The second airstrike was carried out early on Sunday, when Israeli aircraft hit what Palestinians said was a goldsmith’s shop, and the Israeli military said was a weapons-manufacturing facility, near Al-Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza Strip.

Palestinians also said the third strike targeted a metal workshop in northern Gaza City. A statement from the Israeli military said the facility manufactured weapons.

The three Israeli airstrikes came after militants launched two mortar shells, and one makeshift missile, at Israel on Saturday.

The launches conform to a sporadic pattern since Israel’s fierce offensive against Gaza militants ended on Jan. 18. The militant groups have fired far few projectiles at Israel — close on 270 rockets and mortar shells — since the offensive ended, compared to the more than 3,300 fired in 2008.

The interior minister of the de-facto Hamas government in the coastal strip, Fathi Hamad, said Saturday that Gaza organizations had agreed top stop rocket fire at Israel. He added however that “resistance would be allowed” in case of Israeli attacks.

On Sunday, Islamic Jihad, a smaller faction responsible for much of the rocket fire, said there is “no formal truce,” but confirmed it would temporarily stop its attacks.

“Yes, there is a halt, but if there are attacks by the Zionist enemies, as there inevitably will be, there will be a response,” said Khader Habib, a spokesman for the group.

An end to Palestinian rocket attacks could be an important step toward a broader prisoner swap deal between Israel and Hamas. Hamas is demanding the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in exchanged for Sgt. Gilad Schalit, who was captured by Hamas-allied militants more than three years ago.

Usama Mazeini, a Hamas official involved in the German-brokered negotiations over Schalit, told Hamas newsletter Al-Risala on Saturday that the talks are close to resolving the “obstacles” that remain.

He gave no further details, but the publication quoted anonymous Hamas officials as saying a deal is “reaching completion.”

Later Sunday, Israel’s army chief, Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, said he was “sober” about the prospects for a deal but said media reports about the matter threatened progress.

“We have a deep commitment ... to bring him home, but I prefer to leave this effort behind the scenes.”

 



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