Israel warns Gaza militants against revenge attack

AFP  |  Jerusalem 

An Israeli general has warned Palestinian militants against carrying out attacks in revenge for the blowing up a tunnel stretching from the Strip into the Jewish state last month.

Major General Yoav Mordechai, head of a defence ministry unit responsible for activities in the Palestinian territories, made the comments in an Arabic-language video distributed late Saturday.


Referring to the Israeli operation on October 30, he said that "destroyed a terror tunnel in Israeli sovereign territory," which resulted in the death of 12 Palestinian militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

"We are aware of the plot that the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group is planning against Israel," said Mordechai, whose defence ministry unit is known as COGAT.

"They are playing with fire at the expense of Gazan residents, the Palestinian reconciliation efforts and the stability of the entire region.

"Let it be clear: Any attack by Islamic Jihad will be with a harsh and determined Israeli response.

"This will not only apply to Islamic Jihad but also to Hamas," the Islamist movement that runs the Strip.

Mordechai also addressed the Damascus-based Islamic Jihad leadership, mentioning Ramadan Shalah and Ziad Nakhaleh by name.

He called on them to "take control over the situation," as they are the ones "who will be held accountable" for any attack.

has said it is holding the bodies of five militants retrieved from the tunnel and implied it would try to use them as bargaining chips to retrieve the remains of two Israeli soldiers believed held by Hamas.

Two Israeli civilians, said to be mentally unstable, are also believed to have entered and to be held by Hamas.

Indirect negotiations led to a 2011 deal which saw release more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for soldier Gilad Shalit, who had been held for five years.

Hamas and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas's Fatah signed a landmark reconciliation deal on October 12 aiming to end their decade-long split.

The deal is supposed to see the Palestinian Authority retake control of the Strip by December 1.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, November 12 2017. 15:57 IST