Gaza, October 30: A Gaza Strip militant group spearheading a recent campaign of rocket barrages into Israel said Sunday that it was prepared to cease fire if the Israeli military did so as well.
The rocket fire has provoked retaliatory Israeli air strikes, and on Saturday, nine militants and an Israeli civilian were killed in some of the worst violence in the area in months. The exchange of fire continued overnight, with Palestinians firing 10 rockets into Israel in the early hours of the morning, and Israeli aircraft targeting six militant sites in Gaza, the military said. No casualties were reported by either side.
Egypt had been mediating truce efforts over the weekend, and late Sunday morning, the Islamic Jihad militant group said it was ready to halt its attacks if Israel would halt its air strikes.
“When all jet fighters leave the skies of Gaza, we will stop firing rockets,” said Dawud Shehab, a senior member of Islamic Jihad.
There was no official comment from Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that Israel would step up its retaliatory attacks if necessary, but in the meantime, defense officials said, Israel was holding back in an effort to keep the violence from escalating further.
The defense officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss military operations.
The latest round of violence was set off by a rocket attack earlier in the week.
Both sides, meanwhile, had braced for further strikes.
As a precautionary measure, Israeli officials closed schools in southern communities within 25 miles (40 kilometers) of Gaza, as well as Ben-Gurion University in Beersheba and several colleges, which were to have begun their academic year on Sunday, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. Police brought in reinforcements from other areas of the country.
More than 1 million Israelis live within the range of rockets possessed by Gaza militants.
In Gaza, militants who had been emboldened to remove their masks and emerge from their hideouts following a high-profile prisoner swap with Israel earlier in the month disappeared from the streets again. And the territory’s ruling Hamas movement scaled back its police deployment, apparently afraid that police positions would be targeted by Israeli aircraft.
—SOurce:Arabnews