Yemen missile lands in Israel, airport sirens sound
The early morning attack triggered air raid sirens, including at Israel's international airport, where local media aired footage of people racing to shelters.
PTI
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The Houthis did not claim Sunday's attack directly, but rebel officials appeared to boast about it. PHOTO:AP
Jerusalem,15
Sept
A missile fired from Yemen landed in an open
area in central Israel early Sunday, the Israeli military said, in the latest
reverberation from the nearly yearlong war in Gaza.
The early
morning attack triggered air raid sirens, including at Israel's international
airport, where local media aired footage of people racing to shelters. There
were no reports of casualties or damage, and the airport authority said
operations resumed as normal shortly thereafter.
A fire
could be seen in a rural area of central Israel, and local media showed images
of what appeared to be a fragment from a missile or interceptor that landed on
an escalator in a train station in the central town of Modiin. The military
said the sound of explosions in the area came from interceptors.
Yemen's
Iran-backed Houthi rebels have repeatedly fired drones and missiles toward
Israel since the start of the war in Gaza between Israel and the Palestinian
militant group Hamas, but nearly all of them have been intercepted over the Red
Sea.
The Houthis
did not claim Sunday's attack directly, but rebel officials appeared to boast
about it.
Hashim
Sharaf al-Din, a spokesperson for the Houthi-run government, said Yemenis will
celebrate the birthday of Islam's Prophet Muhammad while “the Israelis will
have to be in shelters.” Another senior Houthi official, Hezam al-Asad, posted
a taunting message in Hebrew on the social platform X.
In July, an
Iranian-made drone launched by the Houthis struck Tel Aviv, killing one person
and wounding 10 others. Israel responded with a wave of airstrikes on
Houthi-held areas of Yemen.
The Houthis
have also repeatedly attacked commercial shipping in the Red Sea, in what the
rebels portray as a blockade on Israel in support of the Palestinians. Most of
the targeted ships have no connection to Israel.
The war in
Gaza, which began with Hamas' October 7 attack into southern Israel, has
rippled across the region, with Iran and allied militant groups attacking
Israeli and US targets and drawing retaliatory strikes from Israel and its
Western allies. On several occasions, the strikes and counterstrikes have
threatened to trigger a wider conflict.
International
carriers have cancelled fights into and out of Israel on a number of occasions
since the start of the war, adding to the war's economic toll on the country.
Iran
supports militant groups across the region, including Hamas, the Houthis and
Lebanon's Hezbollah, its most powerful ally, which has traded fired with Israel
on a near-daily basis since the war in Gaza began. Iran and its allies say they
are acting in solidarity with the Palestinians.
The
military said around 40 projectiles were fired from Lebanon early Sunday, with
most intercepted or falling in open areas.
The strikes
along the Israel-Lebanon border have displaced tens of thousands of people on
both sides. Israel has repeatedly threatened to launch a wider military
operation against Hezbollah to ensure its citizens can return to their homes.
Hezbollah
has said it would halt its attacks if there is a cease-fire in Gaza. The United
States and Arab mediators Egypt and Qatar have spent much of this year trying
to broker a truce and the release of scores of hostages held by Hamas, but the
talks have repeatedly bogged down.
In recent
weeks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has insisted on lasting Israeli
control over the Gaza side of the border with Egypt, which Israeli forces
captured in May. He has said Hamas used a network of tunnels beneath the border
to import arms, allegations denied by Egypt, which along with Hamas is opposed
to any lasting Israeli presence there.
An Israeli
military official said late Saturday that of the dozens of tunnels discovered
along the border, only nine entered Egypt, and all were found to have been
sealed off. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss
sensitive intelligence, said it was not clear when the tunnels were sealed.
The
discovery appeared to weaken Netanyahu's argument that Israel needs to keep
open-ended control of the corridor to prevent cross-border smuggling.
Egypt has said it sealed off the tunnels on its side of the border years ago, in part by creating its own military buffer zone along the frontier.-AP
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