A long-range rocket fired from Gaza yesterday struck an uninhabited area outside the largest city in southern Israel, Israeli police said, hours after a Palestinian official said an end to a surge in cross-border fighting could be near.
Israeli Army Radio said the rocket was a long-range Grad capable of reaching Israel’s heartland.
Police said they found the remnants in an open area on the outskirts of the city of Beersheba and that no one was hurt.
It was a show of force and defiance by Palestinian militants ahead of a meeting of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet, where terms for a possible truce were likely to be on the agenda.
Gaza has been controlled by Hamas for more than a decade, a period that has seen three wars between Israel and the Palestinian enclave.
Four months of confrontation this year have raised the risk of another all-out conflict, with the situation oscillating between violent clashes and cautious talk of peace.
Rocket alert sirens sounded in Beersheba, a city of 200,000 inhabitants some 40km from the Gaza Strip, for the first time since the last war in 2014.
Hours earlier, a Palestinian official said armed factions in Gaza were prepared to halt a round of rocket attacks on southern Israel — where communities near the border had been targeted — if the Israeli military stopped its air strikes after two days of violence.
Ambulance sirens echoed through the night in Gaza, where families huddled at home as powerful explosions shook buildings.
The Israeli military said its aircraft struck more than 150 facilities belonging to Hamas.
A pregnant Palestinian woman and her 18-month-old child, and a militant from the Islamist Hamas group that rules Gaza, were killed in the Israeli attacks, and at least five civilians were wounded, local medical officials said.
Hundreds of people took part in the funeral for the woman and child.
The Israeli military said seven people were wounded in southern Israel. One was identified by her employer as a Thai agricultural worker.
The flare-up came after officials on both sides had talked about potential progress in an effort by the United Nations and Egypt to broker a truce to end months of violence and alleviate deepening humanitarian and economic hardship in the Gaza Strip.
“Factions of the resistance consider this round of escalation over as far as we are concerned, and the continuation of calm depends on the behaviour of the occupation,” the Palestinian official said, using militant groups’ term for Israel.
The Israeli military declined to comment on the official’s remarks.
The official, at a command centre used by armed groups in Gaza, said they had been “responding to crimes” by Israel — a reference to the killing on Tuesday, in disputed circumstances, of two Hamas gunmen.
Yuval Steinitz, a member of Netanyahu’s inner cabinet, told Israel Radio before the Palestinian official’s comments that Israel was “not eager for war” but would make no concessions to Hamas.
Before the Beersheba incident, Israeli officials said Netanyahu was due to hold the security cabinet session later in the day after consultations with security officials.
“Hamas has been hit hard. Israel will keep acting with force. The Prime Minister and Defence Minister have instructed the IDF (Israel Defence Forces) to prepare for all possibilities,” an Israeli official said after the first round of consultations.
Rocket warning sirens sounded almost non-stop in the southern Israeli towns and border communities near Gaza from sunset on Wednesday.
Many residents have a reinforced room in their homes where they can shelter.
The military said more than 180 rockets and mortar bombs were fired from Gaza.
UN Middle East envoy Nickolay Mladenov said the United Nations had engaged with Egypt in an “unprecedented effort” to avoid serious conflict, but cautioned that “the situation can rapidly deteriorate with devastating consequences for all people”.

New Colombia government to review decision to recognise Palestine


Colombia’s new government said it would review former President Juan Manuel Santos’ recognition of Palestine after the previously unreleased decision was made public on Wednesday.
President Ivan Duque took office on Tuesday and was informed a few days ago of Santos’ decision, which was detailed in an August 3 letter to the Palestinian representative in Colombia, the foreign ministry said.
“Given possible omissions that could come to light about the way in which this decision was taken by the outgoing president, the government will cautiously examine its implications and will act according to international law,” new Foreign Minister Carlos Holmes said in a statement.
Santos decided to recognise Palestine as a “free, independent and sovereign state,” according to the letter, which was circulated to reporters by the foreign ministry.
“Just as the Palestinian people have a right to constitute an independent state, Israel has a right to live in peace alongside its neighbours,” the letter said.
The Israeli embassy in Bogota said it was surprised and disappointed.
“We ask the Colombian government to reverse the decision made by the previous administration in its last days, which contravenes the close relations, extensive co-operation in vital areas and interests of both countries,” it said in a statement posted to its Twitter account.
The decision came to light during a visit to Colombia by United States ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley. The United States, a close ally of Israel, was getting more information about the situation and had no immediate comment, the US mission to the United Nations said.
“We thank the Colombian government for this decision and we are sure that it will contribute significantly to generating the necessary conditions in the search for peace in the Middle East,” the Palestine representative said in a statement on Wednesday.
Palestine has been recognised as a sovereign state by the UN General Assembly, the International Criminal Court and at least 136 countries.
Palestine seeks to create a state in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, lands that Israel captured in the 1967 war.



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