Israeli tank fires warning shot at Syrian Golan post

Israeli tank fires warning shot at Syrian Golan post
A picture shows wounded Syrian men sitting next to their mules after arriving at a meeting point with Israeli soldiers on Mount Hermon in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights on the border line between Israel and Syria, before being transferred to an Israeli hospital for medical treatment. (AFP)
Updated 18 November 2017
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Israeli tank fires warning shot at Syrian Golan post

Israeli tank fires warning shot at Syrian Golan post

JERUSALEM: An Israeli tank fired a warning shot on Saturday at a Syrian military position in the demilitarized zone in the northern Golan Heights following construction work there, the army said.
A spokeswoman for the Israeli army said that the Syrian army work “violated the 1974 cease-fire agreement” which “prohibits the entry of heavy construction tools or military vehicles into the demilitarised zone.”
“In response, the IDF (Israel Defense Force) complained to UNDOF (the UN Disengagement Observer Force) and fired a warning shot toward the area using a tank,” the spokeswoman said.
She would not confirm reports that the incident took place near the Syrian regime-controlled Druze village of Hader, which was targeted by rebel forces two weeks ago.
The attack on Hader, which began with a suicide bomber blowing up a car and killing nine people, raised concern among Golan Druze for the fate of their co-religionists at the hands of extremists of the Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group.
The incident had prompted the Israeli army to issue a rare statement pledging to “prevent Hader from being harmed or occupied.”
On Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signaled that Israel would take military action in Syria when it sees fit as it seeks to ensure Iran-backed forces stay away from its territory.
“I have made it clear to our friends, first of all in Washington and also to our friends in Moscow, that Israel will act in Syria — including in southern Syria — according to our understanding and according to our security needs,” he said.
Israel seized 1,200 square kilometers of the Golan Heights from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed it in a move never recognized by the international community.