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Humanitarian Cease-Fire Appears to Hold in Gaza Rocket Fire Resumes After Gaza Cease-Fire Ends
(34 minutes later)
JERUSALEM — A tentative humanitarian cease-fire between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza appeared to be holding on Thursday, even as it was interrupted by a brief flurry of mortar fire shortly after it took effect. JERUSALEM — Rockets from the Gaza Strip soared into Israel starting at 3 p.m. Thursday, precisely marking the designated end of the five-hour halt to hostilities both sides had agreed upon to provide a “humanitarian window” to residents after nine days of fighting.
Two hours into the lull, which began at 10 a.m. local time, sirens wailed in southern Israel and three mortar shells fell in open ground on the Israeli side of the border, military officials said. Israel had threatened to respond with force if militants in Gaza took the opportunity of the temporary cease-fire to fire on Israel, but half an hour after the mortar attack there had been no Israeli military response. The Israeli military said one rocket hit the southern city of Ashkelon and another fell short and landed inside Gaza, as the all-too-familiar sirens again sounded repeatedly across southern Israel. A military spokesman said Israel had not immediately resumed strikes on Gaza.
The Israeli military also said it foiled a major attack from Gaza before the cease-fire began when its forces identified about 13 militants emerging from an underground tunnel into Israeli territory near a kibbutz and attacked them from the air. The pause, requested by the United Nations, came after Israel foiled a predawn attack in which about 13 Palestinian militants emerged from a tunnel near a kibbutz, and as negotiations toward a Cairo-brokered cease-fire deal continued. It was interrupted by a brief flurry of mortar fire that fell in open ground near the Gaza border, but otherwise the quiet held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., allowing Gaza residents to safely come out of their homes to shop and survey the damage the battle had wrought.
An Israeli military spokesman said it was not immediately clear if all the militants from the tunnel had been killed. Residents of the Israeli border community nearest the exit of the tunnel, Kibbutz Sufa, were told to stay in their homes for several hours after the initial confrontation, which began around 4:30 a.m. Palestinian, Egyptian, Israeli and American officials said intense discussions were under way on terms for a cease-fire that could take effect as soon as 6 a.m. Friday, but none was willing to be quoted by name. A high-level Israeli delegation returned from Cairo, where President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority and Tony Blair, the envoy of the so-called Quartet of Middle East peacemakers, met Wednesday with President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt.
The Hamas military wing claimed responsibility on its website for the infiltration, saying a group of its special forces had penetrated “enemy lines near Sufa” and came under fire from the air after the “completion of its mission,” without elaborating. Hamas said that all its fighters had returned to Gaza safely. But the Israeli military said the militants ran back toward the tunnel once they realized they had been exposed. “The effort to achieve an end of the violence is ongoing,” said one senior Israeli official. “We’re not there yet.”
With the Palestinian death toll reaching more than 220, many of them civilians, Israel and Hamas, the Islamic group that controls Gaza, agreed to the suspension of hostilities from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursday at the request of the United Nations. The pause was largely meant to allow civilians in Gaza to stock up on supplies. Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, the military spokesman, said he did not expect the lull to be affected by the infiltration attempt. The attempted incursion into Israel via underground tunnel at 4:30 a.m. was the first of its kind during the current escalation.
An Israeli military spokesman said the militants were attacked from the air, and it was not immediately clear whether all had been killed. Residents of the Israeli border community nearest the exit of the tunnel, Kibbutz Sufa, were told to stay in their homes for several hours after the initial confrontation.
With the Palestinian death toll reaching more than 220, many of them civilians, Israel and Hamas, the Islamic group that controls Gaza, agreed to the suspension of hostilities on Thursday at the request of the United Nations.
As the pause took effect, gone were the thuds of F-16 airstrikes and the smell of cordite that had punctuated days and nights in Gaza. The ripping sound of Hamas rockets, more than 1,000 of which have been fired at Israel since July 8, was also absent.As the pause took effect, gone were the thuds of F-16 airstrikes and the smell of cordite that had punctuated days and nights in Gaza. The ripping sound of Hamas rockets, more than 1,000 of which have been fired at Israel since July 8, was also absent.
Many streets in Gaza remained quiet, yet people were unsure how safe things would remain, as they were mindful of how a previous proposed cease-fire on Tuesday had broken down after just a few hours. On the beach near Gaza City’s small fishing harbor, where four boys were killed by an Israeli airstrike as they played on Wednesday, the children who often play there had not returned.Many streets in Gaza remained quiet, yet people were unsure how safe things would remain, as they were mindful of how a previous proposed cease-fire on Tuesday had broken down after just a few hours. On the beach near Gaza City’s small fishing harbor, where four boys were killed by an Israeli airstrike as they played on Wednesday, the children who often play there had not returned.
But there was one major incentive for Gazans to head out, with some banks dispensing cash for the first time since before the war began.
The banks have been periodically shut down amid simmering disputes between Hamas, the de facto rulers of Gaza, and the Palestinian Authority, based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. The authority has refused to pay Hamas employees since forming a so-called national unity government last month.
The banks in Gaza had closed days before the current war broke out, amid a continuing impasse over the salaries, in order to avoid riots that broke out when people discovered that only employees of Fatah, Hamas’s rival party that dominates the Palestinian Authority, were being paid.
Still, the hours before the lull were punctuated with more Israeli airstrikes and rocket fire. The military said that since midnight it had carried out airstrikes against approximately 37 targets, including 15 concealed rocket launchers. Smuggling tunnels running beneath the Egypt-Gaza border were also hit, according to local reports.Still, the hours before the lull were punctuated with more Israeli airstrikes and rocket fire. The military said that since midnight it had carried out airstrikes against approximately 37 targets, including 15 concealed rocket launchers. Smuggling tunnels running beneath the Egypt-Gaza border were also hit, according to local reports.
The Health Ministry in Gaza reported three Palestinian fatalities early Thursday, including a man killed in an airstrike on a house in Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza, another man, 67, who was killed in a strike while on his way to the mosque for the dawn prayer in Rafah in the south and a woman, 71, who died of injuries she sustained in an earlier strike in Khan Younis.The Health Ministry in Gaza reported three Palestinian fatalities early Thursday, including a man killed in an airstrike on a house in Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza, another man, 67, who was killed in a strike while on his way to the mosque for the dawn prayer in Rafah in the south and a woman, 71, who died of injuries she sustained in an earlier strike in Khan Younis.
And before the lull in the fighting, more than a dozen rockets were launched from Gaza into Israel, including a barrage aimed at the Tel Aviv area at about 9 a.m. At least one rocket was intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system and others apparently fell in open areas. There were no immediate reports of injuries on the Israeli side.And before the lull in the fighting, more than a dozen rockets were launched from Gaza into Israel, including a barrage aimed at the Tel Aviv area at about 9 a.m. At least one rocket was intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system and others apparently fell in open areas. There were no immediate reports of injuries on the Israeli side.
Colonel Lerner described the attempted tunnel infiltration at dawn as “a terrorist attack that could have had devastating consequences” had it not been thwarted. Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, a military spokesman, described the attempted tunnel infiltration at dawn as “a terrorist attack that could have had devastating consequences” had it not been thwarted.
The militants, who he said were armed with extensive weaponry, including rocket-propelled grenades, emerged from the tunnel about 270 yards inside Israeli territory and just over a mile away from Kibbutz Sufa – “a short run,” Colonel Lerner said, adding that the kibbutz, a rural community of about 300 residents, was the presumed target of the attack because of its proximity.The militants, who he said were armed with extensive weaponry, including rocket-propelled grenades, emerged from the tunnel about 270 yards inside Israeli territory and just over a mile away from Kibbutz Sufa – “a short run,” Colonel Lerner said, adding that the kibbutz, a rural community of about 300 residents, was the presumed target of the attack because of its proximity.
The existence of such tunnels is well known to the Israelis but they are difficult to discover and destroy from the air, adding to the argument of those Israelis who advocate a ground invasion of Gaza.The existence of such tunnels is well known to the Israelis but they are difficult to discover and destroy from the air, adding to the argument of those Israelis who advocate a ground invasion of Gaza.
Eyal Brandeis, a member of Kibbutz Sufa, said the residents received text messages at about 4.30 a.m. telling them to stay in their houses. “From the sound of the explosions we understood this was a grave incident,” he said by telephone. Soon the residents were told that there was a suspected infiltration attempt. Shortly before 10 a.m. they were told they could go back to their normal routines.Eyal Brandeis, a member of Kibbutz Sufa, said the residents received text messages at about 4.30 a.m. telling them to stay in their houses. “From the sound of the explosions we understood this was a grave incident,” he said by telephone. Soon the residents were told that there was a suspected infiltration attempt. Shortly before 10 a.m. they were told they could go back to their normal routines.
Mr. Brandeis, a lecturer in political science at Bar-Ilan University near Tel Aviv, said the last 14 years had not been easy for the communities along the Gaza border, but that, “Of course, the tension goes up when there is an escalation.” Also on Thursday, the Israeli authorities formally indicted three Israelis suspected of having killed the 16-year-old Palestinian in Jerusalem. Officials said they believed the killing was carried out in revenge for the abduction and murder of three young Israelis last month.
He said a lot of mortar shells fall without warning in the area. “We just have to stay alert,” he said.