JERUSALEM: Israeli tanks fired at three Hamas positions in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday after gunfire from the Palestinian enclave targeted soldiers, the army said.

The exchanges of fire came after weeks of mass protests and clashes on the Gaza border, which peaked on Monday when some 60 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces. Protests since then have dwindled.

Following the first shots fired at Israeli soldiers from northern Gaza, troops “targeted a military post belonging to the Hamas terror organisation with tank fire,” the army said in a statement.

A Palestinian security source in Gaza said the target was a Hamas observation point, but that the Israeli attack resulted in no injuries.

Later in the day, gunfire from southern Gaza targeted Israeli troops, in response to which a tank targeted two Hamas “military posts” in the same region.

No Israeli soldiers were wounded in either case.

In a separate incident, bullets from a heavy machinegun fired in Gaza hit a house in nearby Israeli town Sderot, causing damage but no injuries, police said.

The army said the incident was “serious” and they considered “terror group Hamas responsible for anything taking place in and from Gaza.”

Palestinians have held demonstrations on the border since March 30 for what they call the right of return. Monday’s protests were also against the move of the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Israel has faced international criticism over its use of live fire, but insists its actions are necessary to defend the border and stop mass infiltration from the Palestinian enclave, which is run by Islamist movement Hamas.

Earlier on Wednesday, Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman called Hamas leadership “a bunch of cannibals that treat their children as ammunition”.

Speaking at an army base near the Gaza border, Lieberman said the goal of Hamas was “to remove the siege (over Gaza) but not to build their economy or create coexistence,” he said, referring to the Israeli blockade of the strip.

He argued their aims were rather “to smuggle arms, continue building their military force and create another upgraded Hezbollah model”, referring to the armed Lebanese group.

Published in Dawn, May 17th, 2018

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