Airstrikes come after terror groups launch 37 projectiles at Israel throughout the day, following death of hunger-striking Islamic Jihad member in Israeli prison
The Israeli Air Force carried out airstrikes in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday night in response to 37 rockets launched from the Palestinian enclave at southern Israel earlier in the day.
In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces confirmed the strikes were taking place, but did not immediately provide further detail.
Palestinian media outlets reported that explosions were heard across northern and central Gaza. Footage published online showed large explosions rocking the territory.
One man was badly injured in an airstrike on a site belonging to the Hamas terror group, Palestinian media reported.
The military wing of Hamas said its members fired missiles at Israeli aircraft over the Gaza Strip amid the strikes. The shoulder-launched missiles are not thought to pose a threat to Israeli fighter jets, although they have set off incoming rocket siren alarms in southern Israel in the past.
Amid the airstrikes, sirens sounded in the southern city of Sderot and other nearby towns close to the Gaza border. The range of the rocket fire appeared to have increased from earlier, as sirens also sounded in the town of Talmei Bilu, northeast of Netivot, some 13 kilometers (8 miles) from Gaza.
Sirens continued to go off in communities near the Gaza border after midnight. There were no immediate confirmed rocket launches after those warnings, or reports of injuries or damage.
Earlier Tuesday, Palestinian terrorists in Gaza launched 37 rockets at southern Israel in a series of attacks, in response to the death of a hunger-striking senior member of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group while he was in Israeli custody.
According to police, five rockets landed in urban areas, including one that hit a construction site in the southern city of Sderot and wounded three foreign nationals, one moderately and two lightly.
The IDF said the Iron Dome air defense system downed five of the rockets throughout the day. The rest landed in open areas or fell short, landing inside Gaza.
Israel had readied for a potential escalation after Palestinian Islamic Jihad member Khader Adnan died in Israeli custody early Tuesday morning following an 86-day hunger strike.
Shortly after Adnan’s death was announced, four rockets were fired from Gaza, causing no injuries. In response, IDF tanks struck a Hamas observation post near the border, but held off from immediately responding to the additional attacks throughout the day.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government had come under intense pressure to respond forcefully to the rocket barrages, with much of the pressure coming from within Netanyahu’s own coalition. The right-wing bloc’s approval rates have declined since it returned to power four months ago, promising to restore security, only to be met with a sustained series of deadly Palestinian terror attacks and security tensions on other fronts as well.
The so-called “Joint Operations Room” of various Palestinian terror factions in the Gaza Strip took responsibility for the rocket attacks.
In a statement on Tuesday afternoon, the collective, which includes both the Hamas and Islamic Jihad terror groups, said the attacks came as a response to the death of Adnan.
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