by News Agencies, Nikki Guttman and Israel Hayom Staff
Palestinian terrorist group vows to retaliate for deaths of three Palestinian teens killed in Israeli airstrike while approaching Gaza border fence
An explosion is seen during Israeli airstrikes on terrorist targets
in the Gaza Strip, Saturday
Photo: Reuters
Two days after agreeing to a cease-fire with Israel,
the Gaza-based terrorist organization Islamic Jihad on Monday
threatened to renew its attacks on Israeli communities in retaliation
for the deaths of three Palestinian teenagers.
Gaza health ministry officials reported
that three Palestinian boys were killed in an Israeli airstrike on
Sunday. The IDF said its aircraft targeted "three terrorists approaching
the security fence, who were trying to sabotage it and were apparently
planting a bomb."
Islamic Jihad is an Iranian-backed terrorist group that sometimes operates independently of Gaza's Hamas rulers.
"We vow to retaliate for the killing of
children on the Gaza Strip border in a way that will befit the scope of
the crime," an Islamic Jihad spokesman said.
On Sunday, Gaza authorities reported that
two of the boys were 13 years old and the third was 14. The Health
Ministry said ambulance crews had brought the bodies from the border
fence to a hospital.
The latest strike came after a surge in
violence in the conflict on the Gaza border. Over the weekend, Hamas
sent its largest volley of rockets in months over the Israeli border.
The Iron Dome defense system intercepted all the rockets that posed a
threat to populated areas, and the rest detonated in open areas.
In retaliation, the Israeli Air Force struck at least 80 targets in the Gaza Strip, including terrorist training sites and weapons storage facilities.
Meanwhile, residents of Israeli communities
near the border – whose lives have been disrupted and whose fields have
burned in the eight months since Hamas began staging its weekly
"marches of return" along the border and launching firebomb balloons and
kites into Israel – launched a nationwide protest on Monday against
the government's lack of decisive action against terrorism from Gaza.
The residents marched to the Kerem Shalom
border crossing – the only entry point of commercial goods from Israel
into the Gaza Strip – and cut off access to it in protest against the
transfer of goods into Gaza while Hamas continues to terrorize Israel's
southern communities.
Monday's march was just one of many planned
demonstrations, including a protest at a major junction in Tel Aviv the
previous day.
"When there is a Color Red [rocket alert] near Gaza, the entire country will hear it," organizers vowed.
The protests began on Saturday night, when
several dozen residents of border communities staged a protest at the
Yad Mordechai intersection.
Yifat Ben Shoshan of Moshav Netiv Haasara,
one of the organizers, said, "We refuse to remain quiet about the
situation. Our voice isn't being heard and disaster is closer than
ever."
During the demonstration on Saturday,
activists disclosed that they were planning to shut down high schools in
their communities, and some parents kept younger children home from
school on Sunday.
Merav Cohen of Kibbutz Ein Hashloshah, who
initiated the school protest, said, "We need to take action on our own
behalf because no one will do it for us. We don't want tragedy to strike
before something is done to prevent it."
Naama Shaked-Levy of Kibbutz Gvulot spent
Sunday preparing placards with her three children, whom she did not send
to school as part of the protest.
"My kids know why they're staying home and
we sat down to make picket signs," she said. "It's an important lesson
in democracy. It doesn't make sense for kids to be frightened of
balloons and kites, and that everything here is burning."
Speaking of the mass shooting at a
Pittsburgh synagogue on Saturday in which 11 people were murdered,
Shaked-Levy said that "when the disaster in Pittsburgh happened,
Diaspora Affairs Minister Naftali Bennett flew there right away. But
here, people are ignoring the catastrophe."
Miri Assulin, one of the organizers of
Sunday's Tel Aviv demonstration, said, "We don't intend to resume our
routine and accept the 'battered wife' reality, where we're promised
that everything will be OK and then it happens again."
News Agencies, Nikki Guttman and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/10/29/days-after-truce-reached-islamic-jihad-threatens-to-pound-israel/
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