Israeli forces target Hamas sites in Gaza after Palestinian mortar fire, two killed in separate blast

Gaza's demarcation line with Israel has been the scene of months of mass protests as well as rocket fire and Israeli strikes (AFP/File Photo)
Updated 27 August 2019
Follow

Israeli forces target Hamas sites in Gaza after Palestinian mortar fire, two killed in separate blast

  • Witnesses said fire from an Israeli drone hit Hamas facilities
  • In separate incident, two Palestinians killed and one injured after explosion in Gaza City

GAZA CITY, Palestine: Two Palestinians were killed and another injured in an explosion in Gaza City Tuesday night, the Palestinian health ministry said, adding the cause of the blast was unknown.

The Israeli military denied the deaths was caused by one of its air strikes, and Palestinian eyewitnesses at the scene told AFP they had seen no aircraft overhead.

Earlier on Tuesday, Israel had launched an air strike against Gaza’s Hamas rulers on Tuesday after its militants in the strip fired a mortar round across the border, the army said.

Witnesses said that fire from an Israeli drone hit Hamas facilities east of Al-Bureij refugee camp.

No injuries were reported.

“A short while ago a mortar shell was identified as having been fired from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory,” an Israeli army statement said in English.

“In response, an Israel Defense Forces aircraft targeted a Hamas military post in the northern Gaza Strip.”

Israeli media said the shell fell on open ground, causing no injuries or damage.

Tuesday’s events were the latest in a string of cross-border incidents which have raised concerns of further escalation before Israel’s September 17 elections.

On Monday Israeli warplanes hit what the military said were “terror targets in a Hamas military compound in the northern Gaza Strip, including the office of a Hamas battalion commander.”

Israel also announced it was slashing by half the fuel it pipes to the strip’s main power station, meaning a cut to Gaza’s already meagre electricity supply.

The measures came after three rockets were fired from Gaza into southern Israel on Sunday night, according to the army, which said two of them were intercepted by air defense systems.

Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza have fought three wars since 2008.

August has seen rocket fire from Gaza, infiltration attempts by armed Palestinians and return fire by Israel, threatening a fragile cease-fire.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is fighting for reelection in the September polls, with political opponents calling for tougher action against Islamist movement Hamas.


Iranian hardline clerics seek swift naming of new supreme leader

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Iranian hardline clerics seek swift naming of new supreme leader

  • Calls by the clerics suggest that at least some in the clerical establishment are uncomfortable with leaving a three-man council in charge
DUBAI: Two influential and ‌hardline Iranian clerics have called for the swift selection of a new supreme leader to help guide the nation amid a new wave of US and Israeli strikes, Iranian media reported on Saturday.
The calls by the clerics suggest that at least some in the clerical establishment are uncomfortable with leaving a three-man council in charge, even temporarily under constitutional rules, after the killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali ‌Khamenei.
US President ‌Donald Trump has said the ‌US ⁠should have a role ⁠in choosing the new leader, a demand Iran has rejected.
Naser Makarem Shirazi, a grand ayatollah, which means he commands a broad following for his religious rulings, said an appointment was needed swiftly to “help better organize the country’s affairs,” state media reported.
Last ⁠week, two senior Shi’ite religious authorities ‌also issued fatwas, or religious ‌decrees, calling on Muslims around the world to avenge ‌the killing of Khamenei. Makarem Shirazi said it was ‌a religious duty for Muslims “until the evil of these criminals is eradicated from the world.”
Grand Ayatollah Hossein Nouri Hamedani also urged members of the Assembly of Experts, ‌a clerical body charged with choosing the new leader, to accelerate the process ⁠of ⁠picking Khamenei’s successor, state media reported.
Following rules laid out in Iran’s constitution, a three-man council comprising the president, a senior cleric and the head of the judiciary, has taken on the supreme leader’s role until the Assembly of Experts decides.
The constitution states a supreme leader should be chosen within three months, although with war raging, it is not immediately clear how quickly the 88-member Assembly of Experts can convene. Sources have said some clerics have held some consultations online.