Two rockets fired from Lebanon strike in Israel
Australian Herald
Saturday 12th September, 2009
There has been a flare-up on the Israeli border with Lebanon.
At least two rockets fired from Lebanon crashed into northern Israel, breaking a calm along the border that has prevailed since January. Israeli artillery returned fire.
The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) returned fire with artillery rounds, after which the firing stopped, and there have been no reports of casualties on either side.
Deputy police commander Kobi Bachar spoke to reporters at the scene.
He said loud explosions startled residents, who jammed phone lines to police. The army and police rushed to the area and determined that there were no injuries or serious damage.
Rocket attacks have been rare since the Lebanon War three years ago, when Israel fought the Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah.
Israel launched the deadly 34-day assault on Lebanon after Hezbollah kidnapped two Israeli soldiers and killed five in a cross-border raid. During the conflict, Hezbollah fired more than 4,000 rockets at Israel.
Bachar does not expect a repeat of that.
He said Israel is treating the attack as an isolated incident and there is no special security alert. He said residents should return to their normal routine.
Hezbollah is not believed to be responsible for this attack, but rather a small Palestinian faction.
To prevent the situation from exploding again, the United Nations has deployed 13,000 peacekeepers in Lebanon since the war. Colonel Oxel Agnel is an officer in the U.N. force.
"For the time being we are conducting an investigation here in Israel, and also another investigation in Lebanon," he said.
In a statement issued by his spokesperson, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Friday that “the parties must fully adhere to Security Council resolution 1701,” which helped to end the 2006 war and calls for respect for the so-called Blue Line that separates Israeli and Lebanese sides, the disarming of militias, and an end to arms smuggling, among other measures.
The Secretary-General and other top UN officials have noted that incidents such as rocket firing pose a serious challenge to the implementation of resolution 1701.
In Friday’s statement, Mr. Ban also appealed to the sides to “respect the cessation of hostilities agreement.”
In coordination with the Lebanese Armed Forces, UNIFIL has deployed additional troops and reaction force in the area to prevent escalation.
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