Israeli warplanes launched new strikes against Hamas in the Gaza Strip yesterday in response to mortar fire, as the worst cross-border violence since a 2014 war entered a third day.
The Palestinian fire targeted Israeli forces searching along the border, and short distances inside Gaza, for infiltration tunnels leading into southern Israel — among the most feared weapons of Hamas fighters during the 2014 conflict.
Israeli aircraft attacked sites at Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza and near Khan Yunis in the south of the territory, witnesses said.
There were no reports of any casualties.
The Israeli army confirmed only one strike, saying it was a reaction to cross-border mortar fire.
“In response to the ongoing attacks against Israeli forces, Israel Air Force aircraft targeted a Hamas terror infrastructure,” an army statement said.
It was the fourth air raid on the blockaded Palestinian enclave since Wednesday, when direct clashes between Hamas and Israeli forces broke out for the first time since 2014.
Since then, Hamas and other resistance groups have fired at least 10 mortar rounds across the frontier, while Israeli tanks stationed on the border have fired repeatedly at what the army said were Hamas targets.
On Thursday, Zeina al-Amour, a 54-year-old Palestinian woman, became the first fatality of the flare-up after Israeli tank fire hit her home, medics said.
The violence has raised concerns for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, the rulers of Gaza, that has held since the 50-day war left 2,251 Palestinians and 73 Israelis dead.
On both sides of the border, residents said they were living in fear of a wider conflict.
“In the night there is the sound of mortars, bombs, planes,” said Jehan Berman, a resident of kibbutz Kerem Shalom which is only 40m  from the border with Gaza.
Kerem Shalom is close to where the army has uncovered two Hamas tunnels,  in recent weeks, the most recent discovery coming on Thursday.
Destruction of the tunnels became one of Israel’s primary goals during the 2014 war, with more than 30 destroyed, according to the army.
Since the conflict, Hamas has continued to build what it calls “resistance tunnels”.
Citing Hamas activities, Israel maintains a tight blockade on Gaza which human rights groups say is collective punishment against its more than 1.8mn residents.
Ali al-Moghrabi, 40, a tailor from Gaza City’s Al Hanan Zeitun neighbourhood which was bombed on Thursday, said he still hadn’t recovered from the last conflict.
“We do not want war, but the occupier (Israel) never stops,” he said. “People are already suffering from the blockade, unemployment and poverty.”
Hanane Akkaoui, a 53-year-old mother said she was scared for her children.
“Bombs don’t differentiate between civilians and resistance (fighters),” she said.
Hamas’ armed wing, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, has accused Israeli soldiers of incursions into Gazan territory in recent days by between 150-200 metres,  saying this constitutes a violation of the 2014 truce.
The Israeli army admits it has operated inside Palestinian territory but said it was within 100m  of the border, where it says it has operated since the 2014 war.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened his security cabinet yesterday morning to discuss the latest developments, public radio reported.
There were no immediate official statements from the session, whose closed-door deliberations are classified.   
Army spokesman Peter Lerner said on Thursday that Israel had “no interest whatsoever” in a military escalation but added that it would continue to act against Hamas as “it continues to breach Israeli sovereignty and build tunnels.”
Israeli media reported yesterday that a pending report on the conduct of the 2014 war is set to be highly critical of Netanyahu, Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon and others.
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