About twenty-five of the Palestinians killed were militants, including those hits preparing to launch rockets according to Israel. In the Gaza Strip, minimum of ten people has been killed by Israeli air strikes including a top commander of a Palestinian militant group.
A Local
health officials said a young girl was among the dead with dozens of others
wounded.
Israel's
PM said the operation followed "an immediate threat" by Palestinian
Islamic Jihad (PIJ) after the arrest of one of its members early this week.
The PIJ
fired more than 100 rockets into Israel "in an initial response".
Most were
intercepted by Israel's Iron Dome missile defence shield. Sirens were heard in
a number of Israeli cities.
The Israel
Defense Forces (IDF) said it then resumed strikes late on Friday, targeting
militant positions.
In a
televised address earlier in the day, Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid said
"Israel carried out a precise counter-terror operation against an
immediate threat".
The IDF
said it struck sites linked to the PIJ. They include the high-rise Palestine
Tower in Gaza City, hit in a loud explosion which left smoke pouring from the
building.
Four PIJ
militants - including Tayseer Jabari - and a five-year-old girl were among
those killed since the strikes started, local health officials say.
They say
another 55 people were injured.
An Israeli
military spokesman said the IDF was "assuming about 15" militants had
been killed.
Israel's
Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked told Channel 12 News: "We don't know how
this will play out… but this could take time… This could be a lengthy round [of
conflict] and a hard one."
Speaking
while on a visit to the Iranian capital, Tehran, PIJ secretary general Ziyad
al-Nakhala said "we will respond forcefully to this aggression, and there
will be a fight in which our people will win".
"There are no red lines for this battle... and Tel Aviv will be under the rockets of the resistance." Meanwhile, Hamas, which governs the Gaza Strip, said that armed groups were "united" in battle and would not keep silent.
On Monday
night, Israel arrested Bassem Saadi, reported to be the head of PIJ in the West
Bank. He was held in the Jenin area as part of an ongoing series of arrest
operations after a wave of attacks by Israeli Arabs and Palestinians that left
17 Israelis and two Ukrainians dead. Two of the attackers came from the Jenin
district.
After
Bassem Saadi's arrest, Israel heightened security measures for communities near
its border with Gaza, warning that PIJ intended to attack civilians and
soldiers. Road closures brought towns and villages in southern Israel to a
grinding halt.
PIJ, which
is backed by Iran, has its headquarters in Damascus, Syria, and is one of the
strongest militant groups in Gaza. It has been responsible for many attacks,
including rocket-fire and shootings against Israel.
Israel and
PIJ fought a five-day conflict in November 2019 after fighting erupted
following the killing by Israel of a PIJ commander who Israel said was planning
an imminent attack. The violence left 34 Palestinians dead and 111 injured,
while 63 Israelis needed medical treatment.
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