Israel, Palestinians pull back after Gaza
exchange of fire
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[May 27, 2015]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi
GAZA (Reuters) - Israel and Palestinian
militants appeared to be pulling back on Wednesday from further
hostilities after Israel responded with air strikes to a rocket attack
from the Gaza Strip.
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No casualties were reported on either side of the border, and
Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon blamed the rocket launching
late on Tuesday on "elements in the Islamic Jihad" group in the
Hamas Islamist-run enclave.
His comments followed Israeli media reports that infighting among
Islamic Jihad militants may have precipitated the rocket firing
without the permission of Hamas authorities.
The reports also said that Hamas, whose forces are dominant in the
territory of 1.8 million Palestinians, had arrested Islamic Jihad
members behind the missile strike, the deepest into Israel since the
end of last year's 50-day Gaza war.
An Islamic Jihad spokesman was not available to comment. Hamas
officials had no comment on the reported arrests.
The projectile struck near the Israeli port city of Ashdod, some 20
kilometers (12 miles) from the Gaza frontier, Israeli security
forces said, and hours after the attack there was still no claim of
responsibility.
Israeli warplanes hit back early on Wednesday, striking four "terror
infrastructures" in the southern Gaza Strip, the Israeli military
said. Gaza residents said the targets included training camps used
by Islamic Jihad militants.
No further fighting was reported, and it appeared that Israel chose
to attack evacuated or open areas in a signal to Hamas that it hoped
to avoid escalation.
It also issued a warning that further rocket strikes would draw a
more powerful response.
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"If there is no quiet in Israel, the Gaza Strip will pay a very
heavy price, which will cause anyone planning to challenge us to
regret their actions," Yaalon said in a statement.
In comments posted on a pro-Hamas website, Sami Abu Zuhri, a
spokesman for the group, said Israel was responsible for "the
escalation last night and it must stop these foolish acts".
Last year, militants in Gaza launched thousands of rockets and
mortar bombs into Israel during a July-August war in which Israeli
shelling and air strikes battered the small, coastal Palestinian
enclave.
The region has been largely quiet since an Egyptian-brokered
ceasefire that halted seven weeks of fighting.
(Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Additional reporting by Ori Lewis;
editing by Ralph Boulton)
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