(Reuters) - A mortar fired from the Gaza Strip hit southern Israel,
the Israeli military said on Saturday, the second such incident since a
seven-week war in the Palestinian enclave ended in August. Hours after the projectile struck harmlessly, there was no Israeli counter-strike, an apparent sign Israel was looking to avoid any escalation. An Aug. 26 Gaza truce has largely held. The
rocket fire came amid rising tension between Israel and the
Palestinians in East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians want as the
capital of a future state, along with Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
"Overnight a rocket or
mortar launched from Gaza struck southern Israel. No damage or injuries
reported," Israeli military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Lerner
said on Twitter. There
was no claim of responsibility from any armed faction in Gaza, dominated
by the Islamist Hamas group. A military spokeswoman said forces were
still searching for debris. Clashes
between Palestinians and Israeli security forces have erupted
frequently in the streets of East Jerusalem and around al-Aqsa mosque in
the past few weeks. The
Palestinians say Israel is looking to change the delicate status-quo at
the compound where al-Aqsa stands, known as Noble Sanctuary to Muslims
and Temple Mount to Jews. It is the third-holiest site in Islam and the
most sacred in Judaism. Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel had no intentions of
altering the status-quo by which Jews are allowed to access the compound
but not to pray there. The Palestinians are further angered by Israel's
moves to expand settlement building in East Jerusalem. On
Thursday Israel shut the holy complex down for almost an entire day as a
security precaution, the first full closure in over a decade.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said through his spokesman that the
shut-down, along with other escalations by Israel, were "tantamount to a
declaration of war".
Gaza rocket hits southern Israel causing no damage or injuries: army

Reuters
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