Saturday, January 18, 2025

Gaza Under Fire: Israel Responds to Hamas Rocket Barrage

AFP Yonhap News

Tensions are escalating as the Palestinian militant group Hamas fired rockets into Israel for the first time in about four months. Israel responded by bombing the base of Hamas in Rafah, Gaza Strip.

Israeli local media, The Times of Israel, reported on May 26 that Hamas fired eight rockets into central Israel, three of which were intercepted. As a result of the attack, two people were injured when debris fell on a house in the suburbs of Tel Aviv and Herzliya.

The Al-Qassam Brigades of Hamas immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

TOI reported that sirens rang again in some areas near the Gaza Strip 80 minutes after the first attack, indicating that the capabilities of Hamas’s military remain intact despite months of Israeli offensive.

Sky News UK reported that 35 people were killed when Israel bombed Rafah in response to Hamas’s rocket attack.

While Palestinian media reported significant damage to tents housing displaced civilians, the Israeli military refuted this, stating, “A considerable number of Hamas terrorists are operating in Rafah.”

Hamas condemned the Israeli military’s bombing in a statement, pointing out that tens of thousands of homeless civilians had gathered there.

According to International News Agency, deaths and injuries are expected to rise.

On May 24, the International Criminal Court (ICC) ordered Israel to cease its offensive in Rafah, but Israel countered that the operation was for self-defense and aimed at eliminating Hamas.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) explained that the targets of the Rafah attack were legitimate and did not violate international law and that precision weapons were used based on information about Hamas’s presence.

They also added that they are reviewing the situation regarding the damage suffered by some civilians in the attack.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has emphasized the need to occupy Rafah to eliminate the last remaining Hamas forces.

The IDF suspects that Hamas has stockpiled rockets in this location and that Hamas organizations, including its leadership, remain present.

Prime Minister Netanyahu rejected an offer from Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas, to cease the war on the condition of releasing Israeli hostages.

Meanwhile, Sky News reported that trucks carrying relief supplies entered the Gaza Strip through Israel’s Kerem Shalom.

This is the first transportation of relief supplies after a new agreement, and Egypt closed its border crossing here when Israel announced its offensive in Rafah.

Sky News noted that it is uncertain how much relief supplies can be delivered as the battle continues in Rafah.

Hot this week

Tesla’s Massive 8% Surge Leads the Charge as U.S. Stocks Rally After Strong Earnings

U.S. stock markets surged as inflation fears eased, with Tesla and Wall Street banks seeing significant gains amid positive earnings reports.

Inflation Eases as Dow and S&P Rise, Nasdaq Extends Losing Streak Amid Tech Selloff

U.S. markets rose on easing inflation, but Nasdaq fell for five days. Quantum computing stocks surged while big tech declined.

Goldman Sachs Predicts Bank of Korea to Cut Interest Rate to 2.75% Amid Slowing Economy

Goldman Sachs predicts a rate cut by the Bank of Korea to 2.75% to boost growth amid slowing consumption and inflation stabilization.

Japanese Prime Minister Moves into Haunted Residence Despite Ghost Rumors

Japanese PM Shigeru Ishiba addresses ghost rumors at his official residence, citing a dark history and personal humor about the situation.

Governor Newsom Challenges Trump to See California’s Wildfires Up Close

California Governor Newsom invites Trump to witness wildfire damage after Trump's criticism of the state's response to the crisis.

Topics

Tesla’s Massive 8% Surge Leads the Charge as U.S. Stocks Rally After Strong Earnings

U.S. stock markets surged as inflation fears eased, with Tesla and Wall Street banks seeing significant gains amid positive earnings reports.

Inflation Eases as Dow and S&P Rise, Nasdaq Extends Losing Streak Amid Tech Selloff

U.S. markets rose on easing inflation, but Nasdaq fell for five days. Quantum computing stocks surged while big tech declined.

Goldman Sachs Predicts Bank of Korea to Cut Interest Rate to 2.75% Amid Slowing Economy

Goldman Sachs predicts a rate cut by the Bank of Korea to 2.75% to boost growth amid slowing consumption and inflation stabilization.

Japanese Prime Minister Moves into Haunted Residence Despite Ghost Rumors

Japanese PM Shigeru Ishiba addresses ghost rumors at his official residence, citing a dark history and personal humor about the situation.

Governor Newsom Challenges Trump to See California’s Wildfires Up Close

California Governor Newsom invites Trump to witness wildfire damage after Trump's criticism of the state's response to the crisis.

83-Year-Old Man Sentenced to 3 Years for Murdering Wife with Dementia

An elderly man received a three-year prison sentence for murdering his wife with dementia, highlighting the challenges of caregiving.

Miss Argentina Claims Miss Universe Was Rigged, Gets Her Crown Revoked

Magali Benejam, 12th in Miss Universe 2024, lost her title after alleging the competition was rigged and criticizing fellow contestants.

NVIDIA CEO Clarifies Misstatement on RTX 50 Series Memory Supply

NVIDIA's CEO Jensen Huang clarified that Samsung, not Micron, will supply the RTX 50 series GPUs, addressing earlier confusion from CES 2025.

Related Articles