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Palestinian man killed in Israeli airstrikes: Gaza ministry

Palestinian man killed in Israeli airstrikes: Gaza ministry
Israeli airstrikes on Gaza killed a Palestinian man, authorities confirmed on Saturday.
4 min read
02 November, 2019
The 27-year-old was killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza [Getty]

A Palestinian was killed by Israeli airstrikes on Saturday, the health ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip said, in an attack launched in response to rocket fire.

Ahmed al-Shehri was killed after dozens of strikes hit the Palestinian enclave in the early hours, allegedly targeting bases of the strip's Islamist rulers and allied groups, a security source in Gaza said.

The health ministry did not confirm whether the 27-year-old was affiliated with any faction.

The Israeli army said the strikes targeted "a wide range of Hamas terror targets", including a Hamas naval site, a military compound and a weapons manufacturing site.

The sound of explosions could be heard up and down the impoverished territory, an AFP correspondent said.

A Hamas source said they had fired at the Israeli aircraft carrying out the raids and the Israeli army confirmed fresh "incoming fire" from Gaza.

The strikes came in response to at least 10 rockets fired from Gaza towards southern Israel late on Friday.

The Israeli army said the country's Iron Dome anti-missile defence system intercepted eight of the rockets.

The rockets were fired in waves, the army said, with air raid sirens sounding.

One house was hit and damaged, without any casualties, the army said, posting a picture of the damage on Twitter.

It was the second consecutive evening that the army reported rocket fire from the Palestinian enclave, which is ruled by Hamas.

Prior to Thursday, there had been no such reported rocket fire from Gaza since September 12.

 

In August, a series of rocket attacks from Gaza and Israeli retaliations, as well as border clashes, raised fears of an escalation between Hamas and Israel, as elections approached in the Jewish state. 

First conviction

Last week, an Israeli soldier was sentenced to one month in prison after being convicted by a military court of killing a Palestinian teenager during mass demonstrations in Gaza last year.

The protests - dubbed "the Great Return March" – called for the right of return of refugees and an end to Israel's crippling decade-long blockade.

The demonstrations, which began on March 2018, peaked on 14 May when the US moved its embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to the contested city of Jerusalem.

Over 61 Palestinians were killed and 2,400 injured on that day, while tens of thousands protested along the besieged strip's border.

At least 305 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire in Gaza since the protests began. Seven Israelis have also lost their lives.

Monday's ruling is the first conviction of an Israeli soldier over the death of Palestinian protesters since demonstrations began in March 2018.

The sniper, whose name has been withheld, was found guilty of disobeying an order and will serve one month of military-related labour as well as a demotion to the rank of private and put on probation, The Times of Israel reported.

Othman Helles, 15, was shot dead as he climbed the Israeli-built security barrier surrounding the Gaza Strip on 13 July 2018.

The Israeli sniper opened fire "without obtaining permission from his commanders while not following the rules of engagement or the instructions given to him earlier", the Israeli army said in a statement.

The Gaza health ministry said the teenager was shot in the chest.

Video footage of the incident shows that the 15-year-old posed no direct or mortal threat at the time he was shot.

At the time, the Israeli army claimed Helles was trying to enter Israel.

Israel has come under widespread criticism for its use of live fire against unarmed Palestinian protesters in Gaza.

Earlier this year, the United Nations said there was evidence that Israel committed crimes against humanity in responding to the protests.

Israeli snipers have targeted people clearly identifiable as children, health workers and journalists.

"Israeli soldiers committed violations of international human rights and humanitarian law. Some of those violations may constitute war crimes or crimes against humanity," the chair of the UN Independent Commission of Inquiry said in a statement.

Gaza has been under a crippling Israeli blockade since 2007, which rights groups say amounts to collective punishment of the impoverished strip's 2 million residents.

Israel and Hamas have fought three wars in the Palestinian enclave since 2008.

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