Israeli city hit by rocket fire

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Suspected Palestinian militants from northern Gaza have launched at least four rockets into the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon, the army says.

No-one was hurt in the blasts which came hours after Israeli troops pulled out of the nearby town of Beit Hanoun, following a six-day operation there.

The operation was launched to stop Palestinian rocket attacks into Israel.

Some 50 Palestinians, including about 16 civilians, were killed. The army says it found large quantities of arms.

The Israeli army says it has taken up positions in areas around Beit Hanoun.

Eyewitnesses said burned cars and broken sewage pipes littered streets of the town where the fierce clashes had occurred.

This is the worst raid we have ever witnessed Beit Hanoun resident Khalil Yazji <a href="/1/hi/in_pictures/6121208.stm" class="">In pictures: Gaza raids</a>

Elsewhere in the Gaza Strip, Israeli forces have killed at least four gunmen and two civilians, militant groups and medics said.

At least two women died when an Israeli shell struck the home of Jamila Shanti, an MP from the ruling Palestinian party Hamas. The army said it was returning fire from the area.

Ms Shanti has been identified as the organiser of a women's protest on Friday to free militants sheltering in a mosque, that was fired on by Israeli troops killing two unarmed protesters.

'Tsunami'

Many of Beit Hanoun's residents poured into the streets to inspect the damage inflicted on their town by Israeli forces.

One resident described it as "the worst raid we have ever witnessed... This is the tsunami of Beit Hanoun".

Numerous buildings bore the scars of tank shells and one mosque was left with only its minaret standing, AFP reported.

Tens of thousands of residents had been ordered to stay indoors, leading to shortages of electricity and water.

<a href="/1/hi/world/middle_east/6122138.stm" class="">Gazans gripped by fear</a>

Israeli forces have made regular incursions into Gaza and the West Bank since the capture of an Israeli soldier in a cross-border raid by Palestinian militants on 25 June.

The latest raids come 14 months after Israel withdrew its settlers and the troops who protected them from the Gaza Strip, which it occupied in 1967.

The Israeli pull-out came as Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Ismail Haniya prepared to hold more discussions on the formation of a unity government.

The talks are designed to ease the international embargo against the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority.

Foreign donors, including the US and the European Union, have boycotted the Palestinian government over Hamas' refusal to recognise Israel or to renounce violence.