
Jerusalem: Israeli jets pounded Hamas positions in Gaza overnight after
Palestinians staged a cross-border raid into southern Israel, the
military said early today.
"Israel Air Force fighter jets
targeted a terror target in a military compound belonging to the Hamas
terror organisation in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip," it said in an
English-language statement.
The strike on the enclave's Islamist
rulers came after four Palestinians "carrying bottles filled with
flammable material" breached Gaza's border fence on Saturday evening
near the kibbutz of Kissufim, Israeli daily Haaretz reported, citing the
army.
There, an army spokeswoman told AFP, they attempted to torch heavy equipment used for work on the frontier barrier.
The machinery was damaged but did not catch fire, and the attackers fled back into Gaza, she said.
No casualties were reported.
"The incident that took place yesterday is one of many severe incidents
that have taken place in the security fence area," the statement said.
Israel holds Hamas, which rules Gaza, accountable for all attacks launched from the blockaded coastal territory.
Last month there was an uptick in cross-border violence, seen as among
the most serious since Israel and Hamas fought a war in 2014 -- their
third since 2008.
After a bomb wounded four Israeli soldiers
inspecting the border fence on February 17, Israel responded by pounding
18 Hamas facilities in two waves of air strikes.
Israeli ground forces also killed two Palestinian teenagers in cross-border fire.