Israel strikes Gaza Strip after missile crosses border


Israel struck a Hamas position in Gaza on Monday, the military said, hours after a missile was fired across the border from the Palestinian enclave.

"An [Israeli] tank targeted a post belonging to the Hamas terror organization in the southern Gaza Strip" in the early hours of the morning, the military said in a statement.

A Hamas security source told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on condition of anonymity that five strikes hit an observation post of the group's military wing near Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

The source said separate strikes hit farming land in central Gaza, with no injuries reported in either incident.

The Israeli strike came hours after a "projectile fired from the Gaza Strip" hit an open area inside Israel without causing any injuries, the military said.

Israel and Hamas, who run Gaza, have fought three wars since 2008. Since the last one in 2014, a fragile cease-fire has been observed along the largely closed border. Missiles and rockets are periodically fired at Israel, and Israel holds Hamas responsible for all rocket fire from Gaza regardless of who carried it out, and usually retaliates within hours.

The summer of 2014 was a disaster for the tiny coastal Gaza City in the Gaza Strip, as the Israeli air force along with troops pounded the city for weeks – the result of an accusation that Hamas launched terror attacks on Israel. During the four-week Gaza war, the Palestinian death toll rose to 2,140, who were mostly unarmed civilians, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry. On the Israeli side, 73 people were killed, mostly soldiers. At least 425,000 displaced people in the Gaza Strip now live in emergency shelters, according to the U.N., and nearly 12,000 homes have been destroyed or partially damaged by Israeli air strikes, leading to worsening humanitarian conditions in the enclave.

Despite efforts to ease the Israeli siege on Palestinian territory, the effects of the Gaza war continue as Gazans are still in desperate need of medical and humanitarian aid. During the 50-day Israeli offensive, Gaza's infrastructure was heavily damaged. Furthermore, a lack of fuel and the bombing of the strip's only power plant led to an electricity crisis in the city.

Since the start of Israel's occupation in 1967, the figures show that the number of internally displaced people (IDPs) in Gaza Strip and the rest of Palestine reaches to 475,000. This means that nearly 25 percent of Gaza's 1.8 million population has forcibly displaced within the small territory of occupied Palestine.

Apart from the ongoing Israeli military operation, Palestinians have long been suffering from Israeli military operations since 1967. According to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), Israel's Cast Lead operation in December 2008, led to 17,000 Palestinians displaced in the Gaza Strip as their homes were completely or partially destroyed. Also, prior to the 2008 Gaza war, at least 129,000 Palestinians were reportedly displaced between 1967 and 2009, as a result of the demolition of their homes and livelihood. Displacement in Occupied Palestine is not a choice but an obligatory fact for all Palestinians as they have been forcibly displaced as their lives have been threatened by the ongoing Israeli assault on Gaza.