Israeli army shells Gaza —again

The Israeli army shelled a site allegedly used by Palestinian militant groups in the central Gaza Strip on Oct. 6, after a rocket fired from the Strip hit an open area in southern Israel. Israeli military vehicles stationed along the border between Gaza and Israel reportedly shelled an area east of the Maghazi refugee camp, without causing any injuries. An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an News Agency that they were looking into the reports. Earlier in the day, an Israeli army spokesperson told Ma'an that a rocket fired from the Strip hit an open area in the Eshkol regional council, causing no injuries.

The shelling and rocket came a day after another rocket hit Israel, and the Israeli army launched airstrikes in the besieged Palestinian territory. Israeli airstrikes and artillery shells hit multiple targets in the blockaded Gaza Strip on Oct. 5 after a rocket fired from the blockaded Strip landed on a road inside the Israeli city of Sderot earlier that day. No injuries were reported on either side. The Salafist group Ahfad al-Sahaba reportedly claimed responsibility for the Oct. 6 rocket fire.

The Israeli army has previously said it holds the Hamas movement—the de facto rulers of the Gaza Strip—responsible for all attacks from the territory, although other Palestinian militant groups are active in the small coastal enclave.

The Palestinian Authority condemned Israeli shelling in Gaza, calling on the international community to quickly intervene to stop Israeli aggressions on Gaza and force Israel to end its near decade-long siege on the small Palestinian territory.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri condemned the Israeli attacks on the besieged enclave, saying that Hamas could not "stand by idly" if Israel continued its escalation. He also called upon the international community to stop Israel's aggression in Gaza.

Meanwhile, an Israeli army air force pilot died and another was injured Oct. 5 as their fighter jet crashed while returning from carrying out air-strikes in Gaza.

The cross-border incidents are the latest to occur since Israeli forces carried out several airstrikes on the besieged Gaza Strip in mid-September, after a rocket was launched from Gaza and exploded in an open area in southern Israel. No injuries were reported.

September's airstrikes came as the second wave of Israeli shelling to strike the besieged Gaza Strip in the span of a month; the Israeli army fired missiles into the northern Gaza Strip town of Beit Hanoun that left at least five Palestinians injured in late August, after a rocket fired from Gaza fell inside Sderot, with no injuries or damage reported by the Israeli army.

On July 1, Israeli forces launched airstrikes at several sites allegedly used by Palestinian factions in the besieged coastal enclave in response to a rocket fired from Gaza that landed in Sderot. In May, a Palestinian woman was killed during several consecutive days of sustained air-strikes and tank shelling from Israeli forces, allegedly in response to cross-border mortar shelling and a rocket being fired from the Gaza Strip.

The majority of the more than 1.8 million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are sealed inside the coastal enclave due to a near-decade long military blockade imposed by Israel and upheld by Egypt on the southern border.

The crippling blockade was imposed following the victory of Hamas in the 2006 Palestinian elections and the subsequent 2007 clashes between Fatah and Hamas, which left Hamas in control of the Gaza Strip and Fatah in control of the occupied West Bank.

From Ma'an News Agency, Oct. 6

  1. New Gaza flotilla intercepted

    In a reprise of the 2010 flotilla affair, a new vessel with aid bound for Gaza was seized by Israeli naval forces 35 nautical miles off the enclave's coast. Crew members of the Zaytouna-Olivia, which set sail from Barcelona in September, were taken into custody and deported. They included Nobel Peace laureate Mairead Maguire. (JP, Oct. 6)