(Reuters) -
Israeli air strikes killed seven Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip on
Monday, the Islamist group said, in the deadliest attacks in a surge of
violence exacerbated by the kidnapping and killing of three Israeli
youths and a Palestinian teen. The Israeli military
said its aircraft targeted "terror sites and concealed rocket launchers
across the Gaza Strip", after about 25 projectiles were fired into Israel on Sunday. Rocket fire from Hamas-controlled Gaza continued on Monday and one Israeli soldier was wounded, the army said. Tensions
between Israelis and Palestinians have risen over the killing of three
Jewish teenagers in the occupied West Bank, which Israel has blamed on Hamas, and of a 16-year-old Palestinian in East Jerusalem. Israel
on Sunday announced it had arrested six Jewish suspects in the apparent
revenge murder of Mohammed Abu Khudair, whose charred body was found in
Jerusalem on Wednesday, a day after Naftali Fraenkel and Gil-Ad Shaer,
both 16, and Eyal Yifrah, 19, were buried. The
three Jewish seminary students went missing while hitchhiking on June
12. Hamas has neither confirmed nor denied having any role in their
disappearance. Hamas's
armed wing said six of its members were killed in air strikes at a
"resistance location" in the southern town of Rafah, at the Egyptian
border early on Monday, a possible reference to a smuggling tunnel. It
said aircraft also attacked in northern Gaza, killing one Hamas fighter. Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to his cabinet on Sunday "to do
whatever is necessary" to restore quiet to southern Israeli communities.
But he also cautioned against any rush toward wider confrontation
with Hamas, Gaza's dominant militant group, whose arsenal includes
long-range rockets that can reach Israel's heartland and its business
capital, Tel Aviv. Far-right members of Netanyahu's cabinet and
politicians in Israel's south have pushed for a stronger response to the
rocket fire that has disrupted life for many Israelis living in the
region, where air raid sirens send them running for shelter. REVENGE Hamas
spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri, speaking after the six Hamas men were
reported killed, accused Israel of committing a "grave escalation" in
violence and threatened to retaliate, saying Israel would "pay the
price". Abu Khudair's death has touched off clashes between police
and stone-throwing Arab protesters, which continued on Sunday night in
East Jerusalem and in several Arab villages in northern and southern
Israel. Police said they arrested 30 people. The
Gaza flare-up began in mid-June, during Israel's search for the three
teens, when Israel arrested many Hamas members across the West Bank. The
Israeli military says more than 160 Gaza rockets have struck Israel
since. In Gaza, Hamas
has been reeling over an Egyptian crackdown on most of the estimated
1,200 cross-border smuggling tunnels run by the group, which Egypt says are used to take weapons into the Sinai Peninsula. Hamas denies Egyptian allegations it backs the Muslim Brotherhood and helps Sinai militants. Hamas
frustrations have also mounted over the failure of a new unity
government, formed under a reconciliation pact with President Mahmoud
Abbas's Fatah movement, to pay salaries of Hamas's 40,000 public
servants in the enclave. Hamas fatalities on Monday were the highest
the group has suffered in an Israeli attack since a Gaza war in late
2012.
Hamas says Israeli air strikes in Gaza kill seven of its men
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.