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Tuesday, April 16, 2024 | Back issues
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Islamic Jihad Fires 20 Rockets at Israel

Islamic Jihad fired a fresh volley of rockets and mortars from Gaza toward Israel Monday, after a flareup that triggered school, road and train closures in southern Israel.

JERUSALEM (AFP) — Islamic Jihad fired a fresh volley of rockets and mortars from Gaza toward Israel Monday, after a flareup that triggered school, road and train closures in southern Israel.

Israel's army said in a statement that 20 "projectiles" had been fired from the Palestinian enclave on Monday, 18 of them intercepted by its air defense systems.

Israeli police images showed that at least one of the projectiles landed in an empty children's playground.

On Sunday, in response to Israel's killing of a man along the border, Islamic Jihad launched more than 20 rockets from Gaza into Israel.

Israel's military said it responded to the rockets with airstrikes targeting "terror sites" throughout Gaza and near the Syrian capital.

The Damascus strike killed two Islamic Jihad fighters and four other Iran-backed militants allied to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor.

Since the start of the Syrian conflict in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria, mainly targeting government troops and allied Iranian forces and the Tehran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah.

Israel rarely confirms responsibility for such strikes, but did so Sunday, describing the target as a base "used as a hub" for Islamic Jihad in Syria.

Israel took a series of precautions amid the rocket fire from Gaza.

The education ministry ordered 65,000 students in towns near Gaza to stay home, postponing exams at universities in Ashkelon, Sderot and Netivot.

The transport ministry canceled trains between Ashkelon and Beersheba, a major southern city roughly 30 miles from Gaza.

The military said Zikim Beach on the Mediterranean Sea just north of Gaza had been closed to visitors.

Sunday's fighting was the most intense between Israel and Islamic Jihad since November, when an Israeli airstrike killed Rasmi Abu Malhous, a senior group commander.

That strike also killed nine members of a Palestinian family unrelated to the armed group, and was followed by a three-day conflict that left 35 Palestinians dead and more than 100 wounded, according to official figures.

There were no Israeli fatalities.

Islamic Jihad is allied with Hamas, the Islamist group that has controlled Gaza since 2007.

But it has not accepted the informal truce Hamas has agreed with Israel in exchange for an easing of the crippling blockade on Gaza.

Hamas and Israel last fought a full-scale war in 2014, but smaller flare-ups are relatively common.

The latest escalation with Islamic Jihad came after Israel's military said Sunday it had killed a militant in Gaza who had tried to plant an explosive device near the border fence.

Israel confirmed that it extracted the man’s body with a bulldozer.

A video emerged on social media, which was authenticated by Agence France-Presse, showing a bulldozer approaching a body while a group of young, apparently unarmed men, were trying to retrieve it.

The sound of gunfire is heard and the men run away as the bulldozer scoops up the body.

Israel's right-wing Defense Minister Naftali Bennett has pursued a policy of retaining the bodies of militants from Gaza as bargaining chips to pressure Hamas, which has held those of two Israeli soldiers since 2014.

Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh, speaking before a weekly cabinet meeting, called the bulldozer incident "a heinous crime."

"(Israel's) occupation kills Palestinians in cold blood and with images that should shame humanity, and in violation of international law which Israel breaches day and night," he said.

© Agence France-Presse

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