Israeli occupation forces airstrikes leave 3 Palestinians
killed, 6 wounded & 3 missing
[ 08/01/2010 - 05:49 PM ]
GAZA, (PIC)--
Israeli occupation airstrikes on Thursday night and Friday morning
killed 3 Palestinians and wounded 6 others in the Gaza Strip. Three
others are missing.
Dr. Muaweyah Hasanain, director of emergency services in the
Palestinian Health Ministry, confirmed to PIC, in a phone call on Friday
morning, the death of 27-year-old and 16-year-old Adi Muhammad Abu Haish.
The body of a third victim of the Israeli occupation airstrikes in
the tunnels area, 21-year-old Naser al-Mahmoum, was recovered on Friday.
Local sources talk of at least three others missing according to Dr.
Hasanin in addition to six wounded when Israeli occupation F16s fired at
least 3 rockets at Shouth and Jaradat neighbourhoods in Gaza.
He added that medical and rescue teams were still looking for four
others that local residents say were missing.
Israeli occupation airforce carried out at seven other airstrikes
against various targets around the Gaza Strip causing serious damage
without human casualties being reported.
IOF troops conducted three incursions on Thursday to the east and
north of the Gaza Strip and tried to assassinate a group of Islamic
Jihad fighters.
Israeli jets attack targets across Gaza, killing 3
Published yesterday (updated) 09/01/2010 02:44
Gaza - Ma'an -
Israeli occupation forces warplanes carried out a series of raids on
sites throughout the Gaza Strip late Thursday night, witnesses said and
Israel's military confirmed.
Three citizens were killed and two
others injured in the Israeli raids that targeted a tunnel near Rafah
crossing south of Gaza.
Medical sources in Abu Yousuf Al-Najjar
hospital identified the dead as Barakat Abu Shalouf, Odai Abu Heesh, 15,
and Naser Al-Mahmum, 22.
Muawiya Hassanein, the Gaza Health
Ministry's director of ambulance and emergency services said the jets
struck four areas in total.
Early reports from Al-Jazeera said a
missile killed one Palestinian and injured two inside a smuggling tunnel
along the Gaza-Egypt border. Locals reported to Ma'an that smoke was
rising above the tunnel area just after midnight.
At least two
missiles landed in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis, one of
them near a school, and a third between Khan Younis and Rafah. Jets were
still flying overhead the area early into Friday morning.
Two
missiles struck what was described as a military target in the Gaza City
neighborhood of Zaytoun. Residents said a missile hit the center of the
nearby Al-Nusairat Refugee Camp.
According to an Israeli military
spokeswoman, the targets included a weapons manufacturing facility in
Gaza City and three tunnels, two along the Egyptian border and another
near the border with Israel in central Gaza. She said the third tunnel
was intended to facilitate attacks on Israel.
The official said
the airstrikes, among the most wide-scale attacks since Israel's
devastating assault last winter, came in retaliation for the 10 mortar
shells reportedly launched toward southern Israel on Thursday. The
military wing of the Popular Resistance Committees said a total of 14
mortar shells were launched in three rounds on Thursday.
The
military spokeswoman told Ma'an Israel "will not tolerate the firing of
rockets by terror organizations at Israel and will continue to respond
against attempts to disrupt the calm in Israel's southern communities."
The three mortar barrages were the largest attack on southern
Israel since the end of its Operation Cast Lead, which left some 1,400
Palestinians dead. Projectiles have been intermittently launched at
Israeli targets in clusters of two to four, with no more than two
barrages in a single day. The PRC said the first launch of two launches
included eight, and the second an additional four mortars.
After
the first two launches, Israeli forces dropped hundreds of thousands of
leaflets into areas in northern and eastern Gaza (pictured above),
warning Gazans to stay away from the border area. Shortly after the
third attack, Palestinians in Jabaliya reported hearing explosions,
although no evidence of Israeli artillery fire or airstrikes was
reported.
One of the projectiles landed near the Karm Abu Salem
crossing, prompting its closure.
'Take responsibility for your
future'
The leaflets, which residents said were dropped in
northern and southern Gaza, warned Palestinians not to approach within
300 meters of the Israeli border, and against digging tunnels into
Egypt.
One reported that the "prohibited zone" includes border
areas in Beit Lahiya, Beit Hanoun, and Jabaliya in the north, Khan
Younis, Khuza’a, and Abasan in the center, and Rafah in the south. A
second warned Palestinians against using tunnels to circumvent the
Israeli blockade of the territory.
"Terrorists, tunnel owners,
and the smugglers of military equipment know for certain that the
continuation of terrorist attacks, the smuggling of military equipment,
and the digging of tunnels will be targeted by the IDF [Israel Defense
Forces], but they continue to work in your residential areas and seek
refuge among you," according to the flier, which was written in Arabic.
"The digging [of] tunnels under your houses and the smuggling of
military equipment into Gaza constitutes a threat to your lives, the
lives of your children, and family, and your property," it added. "Do
not stay idle and let the terrorists use you. They will not stand beside
you when harm is done to you and your property. ... Take responsibility
for your future."
The leaflet also lists an email address and a
phone number urging Palestinians to provide information about smugglers
and tunnel operators.
A military spokesman confirmed that the
leaflets were dropped from air force planes, warning that anyone who
comes within 300 meters of the border is "putting themselves at risk,"
warning against weapons smuggling.
The spokesman said "the IDF
will operate against anyone who harbors terrorists."
Following
the first wave of mortar attacks, Israel announced that the Karm Abu
Salem crossing point was closed after sources said a mortar shell fired
from Gaza landed in the area. Palestinian officials said between 86 and
96 trucks had been scheduled to deliver aid to Gaza.
Israel shut
down its borders with Gaza after the elected Hamas government took full
control of the territory in June 2007. The closure has reduced imports
of vital goods to one-fifth of pre-blockade levels and prevented the
Strip's 1.5 million residents from leaving.