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Makeshift Rocket Launched From Gaza Kills 2 in Israel

A toddler is among the dead. Palestinians often fire the weapons, but casualties are rare.

The World

June 29, 2004|Laura King, Times Staff Writer

JERUSALEM — Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip lobbed crude homemade rockets at an Israeli town Monday, killing a 3-year-old boy and an Israeli man -- the first fatalities in an attack of this kind in 45 months of conflict.

The militant Islamic group Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack, which targeted the working-class Negev desert town of Sderot, half a mile over the boundary between Gaza and Israel proper.


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In recent years, Palestinian militants, mainly from the armed wing of Hamas, have fired hundreds of makeshift Kassam-2 rockets at Israeli communities and Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip. But the primitive projectiles cannot be aimed with any degree of accuracy, and they usually fall harmlessly.

This time, however, one of the rockets slammed to earth near an Israeli child-care center, killing a nursery-school boy and a man who was passing by.

Hours later, Israeli troops took up positions in and around the village of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip, an area that has consistently been used as a launch pad for such attacks. One Palestinian was killed overnight in exchanges of fire, the army said.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon held emergency consultations with his security Cabinet -- a step that is often a prelude to a major military operation.

Violence directed at Israel by Gaza-based militants inevitably fuels debate over Sharon's plan to withdraw Israeli troops and settlements from Gaza. The prime minister reportedly told lawmakers in a closed-door session that he was determined to go ahead with the pullout and would attempt to speed the departure of settlers with an offer of immediate compensation if they leave.

The rocket attack in Sderot occurred less than 12 hours after Palestinian militants blew up an Israeli army outpost in Gaza late Sunday by packing an underground tunnel with explosives. Although the casualty toll was relatively light -- one soldier killed and five injured -- the incident provoked an outcry Monday, with politicians across the spectrum demanding to know why the army had not anticipated such a strike and taken measures to prevent it.

The rocket fell about 8 a.m., just as parents were dropping children off for a day at nursery school. Witnesses described a chaotic aftermath.

"As soon as I heard the noise -- boom! -- I ran outside, and everything was full of smoke," said Mimi Shushan, a teacher's assistant. "I saw the injured mother on her back, and the body of her child on top of her with one of his arms cut off." Parents snatched up their children and fled, but not before many toddlers saw the bloody scene.

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