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Israel strikes Gaza after border clashes; Israeli strikes on Syria kill 4 pro-Iran fighters By Sakher Abou el Oun Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Aug 22, 2021
Israeli warplanes bombed Gaza Saturday after clashes between its troops and Palestinian protesters left dozens injured, including an Israeli border policeman and a 13-year-old Palestinian boy who were both critically wounded. The Israeli military said it carried out air strikes against four weapons sites and that it had reinforced its Gaza division with additional troops. The escalation came exactly three months since Israel and the enclave's Islamist rulers Hamas reached a truce following their deadliest fighting in years. Israeli troops fired at Palestinian protesters who gathered near the Gaza border wall, the army and Palestinian witnesses said. A Palestinian gunman fired at Israeli troops through an opening in the wall and crowds of young protesters hurled explosives over the barrier and tried to scale it. The Hamas-run Gaza health ministry said the injured included a 13-year-old boy left in a critical condition after being hit in the head. "Forty-one civilians were wounded with various injuries," the ministry said in a statement, with Hamas saying "thousands" of protesters had taken part. The Israel Border Police said a 21-year-old sniper in its undercover unit was critically wounded when he was shot by a Palestinian protester. "His condition is critical and there is a risk to his life," it said of the wounded officer. - Hamas called for protest - Israeli police commissioner Kobi Shabtai in a statement vowed the force would "continue to act firmly and with all our might against those who want to harm us." Defence Minister Benny Gantz had warned that "these are definitely extremely serious events that will have a response". Shortly after his comments, the Israeli Air Force said on Twitter that its "fighter jets struck four weapons manufacturing and storage sites belonging to the Hamas terrorist organisation". There were no immediate reports of any casualties from the strikes. Hamas had called a protest Saturday to mark the burning 52 years ago of Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam. "Al-Aqsa Mosque is a red line, and any attack on it will be met with valiant resistance from our people," the movement said in a statement. Late Saturday, Hamas and other groups in Gaza issued a joint statement in which they "saluted the heroic youth" who clashed with Israeli forces. The violence is some of the worst since the May 21 ceasefire came into force. Over 11 days in May, Israel pounded Gaza with air strikes in response to rockets fired from the enclave. - Gaza reconstruction - Hamas said it took action after Israeli security forces stormed Al-Aqsa in May. Reconstruction in Gaza has stalled since the ceasefire, in part because of a crippling blockade Israel has maintained on the enclave since Hamas seized power in 2007. On Thursday, Israel announced it would allow funds from Qatar to reach impoverished Palestinians in Gaza. Other restrictions remain. The ceasefire Egypt brokered between Hamas and Israel has largely held, although there have been flare-ups. On Monday Israel said its "Iron Dome" missile defence system intercepted a rocket fired by militants in Gaza into Israel, the first time since the recent battle. That came after four Palestinians were killed in the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank. In 2018, Gazans began a protest movement demanding an end to Israel's blockade and a right for Palestinians to return to lands they fled after the Jewish state was founded. The Hamas-backed weekly demonstrations, often violent, sputtered as Israel killed some 350 Palestinians in Gaza over more than a year.
Israeli strikes on Syria kill 4 pro-Iran fighters: monitor Syrian state media earlier said its air defence system engaged "hostile targets" over the capital Damascus late on Thursday. "The Israeli enemy launched an aerial attack... targeting positions near Damascus and around the city of Homs," a military source told state news agency SANA. "Our air defence responded to the missiles and shot most of them down." The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the Israeli missiles had targeted "arms depots and military positions" belonging to Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah, in the Qarah area in the northwest of Damascus province, near Homs province and the Lebanese border. The strikes had killed four members of the Iran-backed group, but it was not immediately clear whether they were Syrian or Lebanese, the Britain-based war monitor said. Lebanese media also earlier reported two missiles had fallen in the Qalamoun region. The Israeli army rarely acknowledges its strikes in Syria and a spokesperson told AFP it did "not comment on foreign media information". However, since the start of the war in Syria ten years ago, Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes on Syrian territory, targeting regime positions as well as allied Iranian forces and members of Hezbollah. Israel regularly says it will not allow Syria to become a stronghold of its sworn enemy Iran. The Syrian conflict, which began in 2011 with the regime's repression of pro-democracy protests, has grown increasingly complex over the past decade, drawing in more and more parties. According to the Observatory, the war has left nearly half a million people dead.
US offers $5mn reward for Guinea-Bissau coup leader Washington (AFP) Aug 19, 2021 The United States on Thursday offered a $5 million reward for the arrest of Guinea-Bissau's former coup leader Antonio Indjai who is wanted for alleged drug trafficking on behalf of Colombia's FARC rebels. Indjai, then army chief of staff, staged a coup in 2012 between rounds of presidential elections in the long unstable West African nation. US prosecutors filed charges against Indjai in 2013, saying he had agreed to store tons of cocaine for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, with the ... read more
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