Gaza in state of alert after blasts kill two policemen: officials

August 28, 2019 - 11:34
The Gaza Strip was in a "state of alert" on Wednesday after explosions killed two policemen in the Palestinian enclave, authorities said.

 

Palestinians look at a damaged car after a blast near a police checkpoint in Gaza City. The Israeli military said it had not carried out any night air raids. — AFP Photo

GAZA CITY — The Gaza Strip was in a "state of alert" on Wednesday after explosions killed two policemen in the Palestinian enclave, authorities said.

The officers died in "two explosions targeting police checkpoints" late on Tuesday night, the interior ministry in the Hamas-controlled coastal territory said in a statement.

The Gaza Strip, home to two million Palestinians, was in a "state of alert," the ministry said and AFP journalists reported an increased Hamas presence on the main roads of the enclave.

The authorities in Gaza did not specify the nature of the explosions.

The Israeli military earlier on Tuesday bombed a Hamas military post after militants in the strip fired a mortar round across the border but said it had not carried out any air raids at night.

Palestinian eyewitnesses at the scene said they had seen no aircraft overhead.

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

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is fighting for re-election, with political opponents calling for tougher action against Hamas.

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.

Israeli authorities have accused the Islamist movement Hamas of being responsible for the latest violence, which undermines a truce brokered by the UN and Egypt that provides for an easing of the Israeli blockade of Gaza in return for an end to military operations from the Palestinian enclave.

Specifically, the Israeli army accuses Hamas of not doing enough to contain its ally Islamic Jihad, which is considered close to Iran, an enemy of Israel.

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 the fragile ceasefire. — AFP

 

E-paper