Special report:
Palestine-Israel Conflicts
by Deng Yushan
JERUSALEM, Jan. 8 (Xinhua) -- Northern Israel was
pounded on Thursday morning by two rockets fired from Lebanon, causing injuries
and damage, while few signs were seen indicating a major confrontation across
the fragile border.
One of the Katyusha rockets smashed the roof of a
nursing home at the northern Israeli town of Nahariya and exploded in its
kitchen, when about 25 elderly residents were eating breakfast in the adjacent
dining hall, reported local daily The Jerusalem Post.
Two people were injured when hurrying to take
shelter, and several others were also hospitalized for hysteria, said the
report.
The other rocket landed near the northernmost Israeli
coastal town, a popular tourist destination located some 10 km south of the
Israel-Lebanon border, causing no injury.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) immediately fired
retaliatory shells at the launching sites. Local daily Ha'aretz quoted a
military spokesman as saying that the IDF staged "a pinpoint response at the
source of fire."
Shortly before noon, air raid sirens sounded again
and blasts were heard across Nahariya, and two more rocket attacks were
reported. Yet local authorities later refuted the report, saying that the
explosions were caused by sonic booms.
Amid fears for new attacks, Israeli authorities have
instructed local residents to stay near the rocket-proof shelters, and schools
have been cancelled.
On the other side of the border, Israeli warplanes
intensified patrol over the western sector of southern Lebanon, and schools in
southern Lebanese towns were also closed.
The rocket fire marked the first anti-Israel barrage
originated in Lebanon since the Jewish state launched on Dec. 27 its offensive
against Palestinian militants in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip on its south,
triggering speculations that Israel might have to open a second front.
However, the Lebanese government swiftly condemned
the incident, and said that it was trying to find out who was behind the attack,
in which Hezbollah also denied involvement.
Investigation by the IDF is underway. Initial
assessments indicated that the salvo might be fired by Palestinian groups in
Lebanon, though it is still not clear whether Hezbollah has told them to fire.
"The rocket fire... was carried out by Palestinian
elements in Lebanon, wishing to drag Israel into war," a military spokesman was
quoted as saying, while stressing that "Israel holds the Lebanese government and
its army responsible for thwarting any fire on Israel."
While carrying out a blistering offensive in Gaza
against Palestinian militants, the Jewish state also put troops and police on
high alert in the north, amid fears for attacks from Hezbollah. Israel has
warned the group that should it ignite a second front, Israel would retaliate
massively.
Despite its defiant remarks, the movement has
followed the stand of the Lebanese cabinet which is keen on sparing Lebanon from
any escalation with Israel. A 34-day conflict between Israel and Hezbollah in
2006 left over a thousand people dead and a million displaced.
Late last month, several rockets were discovered in
southern Lebanon aimed at Israel and primed to fire, prompting UN peacekeepers
and Lebanese troops to step up patrols along the border with Israel.
Meanwhile, the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL),
deployed along the border to observe the truce reached after the 2006 war, has
also been put on high alert and intensified patrol and security control across
the area.
The barrage in the north came as rocket attacks from
Gaza continued in the south on Thursday, causing injuries. Israel vowed to end
the rocket fire and restore quiet to its southern land by the ongoing operation.
Under mounting pressure from the international
community, an Israeli delegation meet with Egyptian officials on Thursday for
discussions on a possible Gaza ceasefire, while the Jewish state pushed ahead
with the so-called Operation Cast Lead for the 13th day.
Some 700 people have been killed and some 3,000
others wounded so far in the Palestinian enclave, and the death toll is still
rising. 11 have died on the Israeli side, including four killed in rocket
attacks from Gaza and four killed by friendly fire in the battlefield.
