Israel’s Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon has said Tel Aviv will not tolerate any fire from Gaza on its territory. The statement comes after the first major exchange of fire since November.
Two rockets fired by Palestinians have gone off in an Israeli
border town. Hours earlier, Tel Aviv fired rockets into Gaza,
following a round of Palestinian rocket attacks.
"We will not allow shooting of any sort (even sporadic) towards
our citizens and our forces," Yaalon said.
No casualties or injuries occurred in the exchange.
The initial fire from Gaza was reportedly in protest over a
Palestinian prisoner’s death in an Israeli jail.
Maisara Abu Hamdia, serving a life sentence since 2002 for
attempted murder, membership in Hamas and weapons possession, was
diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus two months ago. The inmate
asked for early release, but the processing of his application took
too long and he died before it was completed.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas blamed the death on
Israel, and strong evidence says the death could have been avoided
had Israeli authorities been less negligent in tending to
Palestinian prisoners. Maisara's son Tariq spoke to RT in order to
clarify.
“He started to complain in August about swelling and severe pain
in his neck… He was left until his health deteriorated completely.
In January, the prison doctor told him that he has cancer cells
around his neck... they were just giving him pain killers. He was
unable to eat because of the tumor in his neck. Even then, they
never provided him with any nutrition to support his health. He was
left until death without any treatment”, said Tariq.
When questioned about the court that convicted his father of
plotting murder, Tariq admitted to being present during the
proceedings, but said they didn’t resemble a real legal
process.
"The witnesses that they probed were their prosecutor, their
interrogator – and another guy who never knew my father. So the
military court sessions in Israel aren’t really ‘sessions’. I never
felt that it’s a proper court.”
Tuesday’s escalation in violence was not the first since the
November truce, which was mediated by Egypt after eight days of
violence killed 170 Palestinians and six Israelis.
In December, Israeli soldiers killed four Palestinians who they
described as rioters, despite Hamas’ claim that the four men were
simple farmers near the border.
Although fears of an all-out escalation of hostilities are present,
Palestinian journalist Khalid Amayreh believes that the final
decision will lie with Israel.
"It depends on the Israeli reaction to a very large extent,
because if the Israelis keep bombing Gaza by means of airstrikes,
then this would probably make the situation unbearable even for the
Islamist rulers of Gaza, but at the same time everyone expects both
sides to maintain a semblance of self-restraint. We hope that the
situation will not deteriorate into an all-out confrontation in
Gaza."
Syrian spillover
Meanwhile, in the latest spillover of the Syrian conflict Israeli
tanks fired into Syria Tuesday after shots were fired at troops in
the occupied Golan Heights region. A mortar shell landed in the
Israeli-controlled section of Golan Heights earlier in the day,
although it was unclear if the projectile was fired
intentionally.
“Shots were fired at an IDF patrol on the border,” a spokeswoman
told Reuters. “No injuries or damage was caused. In response, IDF
forces returned precise fire at the source and reported a direct
hit.”
She said it is also unknown if the mortar was fired by Syrian
rebels or Assad’s forces. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon
remained adamant that Israel would not interfere in the Syrian
conflict, but would respond to any violation of the nation’s
security along the border.
Last week the United Nations Security Council warned that violence
from the Syrian conflict could spillover across the Israeli border.
That concern was related at least in part to the sporadic violence
in the region. Two Syrian soldiers were wounded recently after IDF
troops launched a missile into the area.