Sabtu, 04 Mei 2019

Hostilities flare up as rockets hit Israel from Gaza - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Militants in the Gaza Strip have fired more than 150 rockets into Israel, the army says, prompting air strikes and tank fire on the Palestinian territory.

Sirens went off as people rushed to shelters in southern Israel. Two Israelis were wounded and a Palestinian man was killed in the exchange.

Four Palestinians, including two Hamas militants, were killed on Friday after an attack injured two Israeli soldiers.

The flare-up followed a truce in the run-up to Israeli elections in April.

It marks yet another increase in hostilities despite attempts by Egypt and the United Nations to broker a longer-term ceasefire, says the BBC's Tom Bateman in Jerusalem.

What happened on Saturday?

The rocket barrage sent Israelis scrambling for safety. Media showed pictures of damage to homes about 10km (six miles) north of Gaza.

The injured include a man in Ashkelon and an elderly woman in Kiryat Gat, further east.

The country's Iron Dome missile-defence system shot down dozens of the rockets, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said.

The IDF said war planes targeted at least five sites in Gaza belonging to Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants. Tanks were also targeting militants, it said.

Palestinian officials say a 22-year-old man has been killed and several injured.

What triggered the upsurge?

It began during weekly Friday protests in Gaza against Israel's blockade of the area. A Palestinian gunman shot and wounded two Israeli soldiers at the boundary fence.

The Israeli air strike in response killed two Hamas militants. Another two Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire at the fence.

Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, accuses Israel of failing to implement last month's truce deal, which was brokered by Egypt. Israel says the blockade is needed to stop weapons reaching Gaza.

Saturday's rockets attacks coincided with Palestinians burying the two militants.

"The resistance will continue to respond to the crimes by the occupation and it will not allow it to shed the blood of our people," Hamas spokesman Abdel-Latif al-Qanoua said in a statement on Saturday. He made no explicit claim for Hamas firing the rockets.

About two million Palestinians live in Gaza, which has suffered economically from the Israeli blockade as well as recent foreign aid cuts.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-48160098

2019-05-04 12:23:51Z
52780284410398

North Korea sends a message with launch of short-range projectiles - CBS This Morning

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJauWEZOrlE

2019-05-04 11:24:24Z
52780285346702

90 rockets fired from Gaza towards Israel: IDF - CNN

The Iron Dome aerial defense system intercepted dozens of the incoming rockets, the IDF added.
It also says an IDF aircraft has targeted two rocket launchers in northern Gaza, and that IDF tanks targeted a number of Hamas military posts.
The Palestinian Ministry of Health says one person has died as a result of the Israeli strikes Saturday, and three others are wounded.
There are no reports of any casualties in Israel from the rocket fire.
Saturday's rocket barrage comes less than a day after two militants from Hamas's armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, were killed in an Israeli strike on Hamas posts in Gaza.
Israel launched airstrikes Friday after two Israeli soldiers were wounded by sniper fire along the Gaza border.
Two further Palestinians died in Gaza Friday, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health -- both men succumbing to their wounds after being shot by Israeli troops during protests along the Gaza fence, according to health officials.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/04/middleeast/israel-gaza-rockets-intl/index.html

2019-05-04 10:47:00Z
52780284410398

Rockets fired from Gaza day after Israel kills four Palestinians - Aljazeera.com

A Palestinian has been killed in an Israeli air raid on the northern Gaza Strip, according to Gaza's health ministry, amid a fresh escalation between Israel's military and Gaza fighters.

Imad Nseir, 22, was killed in Beit Hanoun after Israeli warplanes targeted multiple areas in the beseiged enclave on Saturday morning after dozens of rockets were fired from Gaza into southern Israel.

The latest flare-up comes after Israeli forces killed four Palestinians in two separate incidents on Friday.

Al Jazeera's Harry Fawcett, reporting from Jerusalem, said the barrage of rockets fired from Gaza came after an Israeli drone strike in the north of the strip early on Saturday, which injured three people.

"We are looking at another military escalation, the first since last month's in which we saw another exchange of air strikes and rocket fire out of Gaza, which seemed to end with some hopes towards some kind of longer-term resolution," he said.

"There was a good deal of reporting about talks between Israel and Hamas mediated by Egypt with further relaxing of the situation likely to happen from the Israeli side," he continued.

"Hamas says so far all they have seen is the relaxation in the martime controls allowing fishing out to 15 nautical miles from six, which has now been reduced again."

Rockets fired

The Iron Dome missile system intercepted dozens of projectiles, the Israeli army said, adding that about 90 rockets were fired from the strip. No casualties were reported on the Israeli side, the army said.

According to Palestinian news agencies, Israeli warplanes targeted an agricultural area in Beit Hanoun, a northern town in the strip, with multiple air raids following the rocket fire.

Israeli forces at the fence with Gaza also shelled several monitoring outposts east of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.

Gaza health officials also said four Palestinians were wounded in one of the Israeli raids.

The Iron Dome system intercepted rockets above Ashkelon [Amir Cohen/Reuters]
Israelis look on as the anti-missile system intercepted rockets over Ashkelon [Amir Cohen/Reuters]

Sirens went off in the Israeli cities of Ashdod and Ashkelon, and the nearby Zikim beach, located two kilometres north of the Gaza Strip, was also closed off.

Municipality workers told beach goers to leave following rocket fire in Ashkelon [Amir Cohen/Reuters]

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the rocket fire from Gaza.

According to the Palestinian Information Center, Hamas spokesperson Abdullatif Al-Qanou' said: "The resistance will remain present to respond to the crimes of the occupation, and will not allow it to shed the blood of our people."

The Islamic Jihad movement also released a similar statement, saying "the resistance is doing its duty to protect and defend our people", adding that it will "respond to the [Israeli] aggression to the fullest extent."

Meanwhile, the Fatah movement in the occupied West Bank has condemned the escalation on the Gaza Strip and called on the international community to "curb the aggression."

On Friday, four Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces in two separate incidents; two of them were shot dead during the weekly Great March of Return protests near the Israeli fence east of Gaza, while an air raid targeting a Hamas outpost killed two members of the movement's armed wing.

Raed Abu Tair was killed during a protest at the fence on Friday [Mohammed Salem/Reuters]

The Israeli army said it had hit the Hamas base after two of its soldiers were injured at the Israeli fence east of Gaza.

190504054042730

In an attempt to diffuse an escalation between Israel and Hamas, Egypt had summoned senior figures from Hamas and the Palestine Islamic Jihad movement on Friday to its capital Cairo. 

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/rockets-fired-gaza-day-israel-kills-palestinians-190504072709853.html

2019-05-04 10:31:00Z
52780284410398

Israeli military answers Gaza rocket attack with airstrikes - New York Post

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — The Israeli military says Palestinian militants are firing rockets from the Gaza Strip.

The army said Saturday that sirens warning of incoming projectiles sounded several times in southern Israel.

In response, Israeli aircraft targeted two launch sites in northern Gaza. Local media reported three Palestinian casualties.

The deadly flare-up between Israel and Gaza militants enters a second day, shattering a monthlong Egyptian-mediated easing of hostilities.

On Friday, Israel said two soldiers were wounded by gunshots from the Hamas-controlled territory. No group claimed responsibility for the shooting.

Israeli aircraft carried out retaliatory strikes, killing two Hamas militants. Two other Palestinians were killed during the weekly protests along the Israel-Gaza perimeter fence.

Egypt has been trying to reach a long-term cease-fire between Hamas and Israel, who fought three wars the past decade.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://nypost.com/2019/05/04/israeli-military-answers-gaza-rocket-attack-with-airstrikes/

2019-05-04 07:58:00Z
52780284410398

At least 12 killed in India as Cyclone Fani lashes Bangladesh - Aljazeera.com

Cyclone Fani, one of the biggest to hit the Indian subcontinent in years, has barrelled into Bangladesh after leaving a trail of deadly destruction across the eastern coast of India.

At least 12 people died in Odisha, the worst-hit Indian state, the Reuters news agency reported on Saturday, citing the local Indian media.

Meanwhile, police in Bangladesh told AFP news agency that nine people perished even before the eye of the storm rumbled over the border on Saturday morning. Over a million people were moved to safety, Bangladeshi officials said.

190503152031659

Fourteen villages were inundated as a tidal surge breached flood dams. The dead included a minor in Bangladesh's Barguna district on the coast and five others killed by lightning.

"We are mooring our boat because it's the only means of income for us. Only Allah knows when we can go back to fishing again," Akbar Ali, a fisherman near the town of Dacope in Bangladesh, told AFP while battling surging waves to tie his boat to a tree.

With the storm weakening but still packing a punch, winds of up to 70km an hour and heavy rain battered overnight and on Saturday morning the Indian state of West Bengal and its capital Kolkata, including the Sundarbans mangrove forest area.

Reporting from New Delhi, Al Jazeera's Scott Heidler said the biggest challenge before the Indian authorities is to reach the areas hit by the monster cycylone.

"The biggest concern is clearing the roads so that they can get to the communities that are cut off," he said, adding that the hardest-hit areas are without electricity after the power grid collapsed.

Heidler said there are still fears of a heavy rainfall or storm surge along the eastern Indian coast.

"It's a total mess in islands of the Sunderbans as the cyclone has destroyed everything in its path, fuelling fears rivers could burst their banks and leave vast areas underwater," said Manturam Pakhira, Sunderbans affairs minister.

"Locals spent a sleepless night and many came out of their thatched huts and stood on the river banks measuring the level of the water," Pakhira said.

"Several homes have been flattened, roofs blown off, electric poles and trees toppled."

Several hundred thousand people were told to evacuate coastal areas of West Bengal before the arrival of Fani ("snake's hood" in Bengali), with 5,000 leaving the low-lying areas and old, dilapidated buildings of Kolkata, home to 4.6 million people.

"Nearly a dozen people were trapped as an old building in the northern part of the city has collapsed," Kolkata's mayor Firhad Hakim said. "They have been rescued and shifted to a safer place."

Mamata Banerjee, West Bengal's chief minister and a key figure in India's ongoing general election, cancelled all political rallies and set up an improvised control room in a hotel in the path of the storm.

Kolkata's international airport was ordered closed. Train services were also halted.

A damaged water tank after Cyclone Fani hit Puri in the eastern state of Odisha [Reuters]

Odisha state worst hit

Worst hit was the state of Odisha where Fani made landfall on Friday, packing winds gusting up to 200km an hour, sending coconut trees flying, knocking down power lines and cutting off water and telecommunications.

Eight people were killed in Odisha, the Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency reported, including a teenage boy crushed under a tree and a woman hit by concrete debris.

While not confirming any deaths, Odisha disaster management official Prabhat Mahapatra told AFP there were about 160 people injured in the Hindu pilgrimage city of Puri alone.

"It just went dark and then suddenly we could barely see five metres in front of us," said one Puri resident.

"There were roadside food carts, store signs all flying by in the air," the man told AFP. "The wind is deafening."

PTI reported that a construction crane collapsed and that a police booth was dragged 60 metres by the wind.

As Fani headed northeast, Odisha authorities battled to remove fallen trees and other debris strewn over roads and to restore phone and internet services.

Electricity pylons were down, tin roofs were ripped off and windows on many buildings were smashed.

Puri's famous 12th-century Jagannath temple escaped damage, however.

Gouranga Malick, 48, was solemnly picking up bricks after the small two-room house he shared with his six-strong family collapsed, its roof blown away.

"I have never witnessed this type of devastation in my lifetime," he told AFP.

"Energy infrastructure has been completely destroyed," Odisha's chief minister Naveen Patnaik said.

The winds were felt as far away as Mount Everest, with tents blown away at Camp 2 at 6,400 metres and Nepali authorities cautioning helicopters against flying.

Ports have been closed but the Indian Navy has sent warships to the region to help if needed. Hundreds of workers were taken off offshore oil rigs.

A damaged fuel station in Odisha state's Puri after Cyclone Fani hit the city [Reuters]

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/dead-monster-cyclone-fani-enters-bangladesh-190504051938859.html

2019-05-04 07:27:00Z
52780281317115

At least nine dead as monster Cyclone Fani enters Bangladesh - Aljazeera.com

Cyclone Fani, one of the biggest to hit the Indian subcontinent in years, has barrelled into Bangladesh after leaving a trail of deadly destruction in India.

Eight people died in India, according to local media reports. Bangladeshi police told AFP news agency nine people perished even before the eye of the storm rumbled over the border on Saturday morning.

Some 400,000 people have been taken to shelters, officials told AFP.

190503152031659

Fourteen villages were inundated as a tidal surge breached flood dams. The dead included a minor in Bangladesh's Barguna district on the coast and five others killed by lightning.

"We are mooring our boat because it's the only means of income for us. Only Allah knows when we can go back to fishing again," Akbar Ali, a fisherman near the town of Dacope in Bangladesh, told AFP while battling surging waves to tie his boat to a tree.

With the storm weakening but still packing a punch, winds of up to 70km an hour and heavy rain battered overnight and on Saturday morning the Indian state of West Bengal and its capital Kolkata, including the Sundarbans mangrove forest area.

Reporting from New Delhi, Al Jazeera's Scott Heidler said the biggest challenge before the authorities now is to reach the areas hit by the monster cycylone.

"The biggest concern is clearing the roads so that they can get to the communities that are cut off," he said, adding that the hardest-hit areas are completely without electricity.

Heidler said there are still concerns about a heavy rainfall or storm surge.

"It's a total mess in islands of the Sunderbans as the cyclone has destroyed everything in its path, fuelling fears rivers could burst their banks and leave vast areas underwater," said Manturam Pakhira, Sunderbans affairs minister.

"Locals spent a sleepless night and many came out of their thatched huts and stood on the river banks measuring the level of the water," Pakhira said.

"Several homes have been flattened, roofs blown off, electric poles and trees toppled."

Several hundred thousand people were told to evacuate coastal areas of West Bengal before the arrival of Fani ("snake's hood" in Bengali), with 5,000 leaving the low-lying areas and old, dilapidated buildings of Kolkata, home to 4.6 million people.

"Nearly a dozen people were trapped as an old building in the northern part of the city has collapsed," Kolkata's mayor Firhad Hakim said. "They have been rescued and shifted to a safer place."

Mamata Banerjee, West Bengal's chief minister and a key figure in India's ongoing general election, cancelled all political rallies and set up an improvised control room in a hotel in the path of the storm.

Kolkata's international airport was ordered closed. Train services were also halted.

A damaged water tank after Cyclone Fani hit Puri in the eastern state of Odisha [Reuters]

Odisha state worst hit

Worst hit was the state of Odisha where Fani made landfall on Friday, packing winds gusting up to 200km an hour, sending coconut trees flying, knocking down power lines and cutting off water and telecommunications.

Eight people were killed in Odisha, the Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency reported, including a teenage boy crushed under a tree and a woman hit by concrete debris.

While not confirming any deaths, Odisha disaster management official Prabhat Mahapatra told AFP there were about 160 people injured in the Hindu pilgrimage city of Puri alone.

"It just went dark and then suddenly we could barely see five metres in front of us," said one Puri resident.

"There were roadside food carts, store signs all flying by in the air," the man told AFP. "The wind is deafening."

PTI reported that a construction crane collapsed and that a police booth was dragged 60 metres by the wind.

As Fani headed northeast, Odisha authorities battled to remove fallen trees and other debris strewn over roads and to restore phone and internet services.

Electricity pylons were down, tin roofs were ripped off and windows on many buildings were smashed.

Puri's famous 12th-century Jagannath temple escaped damage, however.

Gouranga Malick, 48, was solemnly picking up bricks after the small two-room house he shared with his six-strong family collapsed, its roof blown away.

"I have never witnessed this type of devastation in my lifetime," he told AFP.

"Energy infrastructure has been completely destroyed," Odisha's chief minister Naveen Patnaik said.

The winds were felt as far away as Mount Everest, with tents blown away at Camp 2 at 6,400 metres and Nepali authorities cautioning helicopters against flying.

Ports have been closed but the Indian Navy has sent warships to the region to help if needed. Hundreds of workers were taken off offshore oil rigs.

A damaged fuel station in Odisha state's Puri after Cyclone Fani hit the city [Reuters]

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/dead-monster-cyclone-fani-enters-bangladesh-190504051938859.html

2019-05-04 05:58:00Z
52780281317115