Rocket hits Israeli mall near Gaza, causes injuries
By Ophir Avitan
ASHKELON, Israel (Reuters) - A rocket fired by Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip injured over 30 people at a shopping mall in the Israeli city of Ashkelon on Wednesday, Israeli emergency service officials and the army said.
The attack came as U.S. President George W. Bush met Israeli leaders in Jerusalem to mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Jewish state -- an event Palestinians commemorate as the "Nakba", or catastrophe, for their people.
Later on Wednesday an Israeli air strike killed at least two Hamas gunmen and wounded four others east of Gaza City, Hamas officials said. An Israeli army spokesman confirmed that an aircraft had fired a missile at gunmen in the area.
The Israeli army regularly attacks Gaza, from which it withdrew occupying troops and settlers in 2005. Such raids have killed some 300 people in Gaza this year, more than 100 of them civilians.
A top floor clinic at the Hutzot mall, close to Israel's main coastal highway, took the brunt of the rocket blast.
The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command and the Salahudeen Brigades, a group allied with Hamas, claimed responsibility for the attack, one of an almost daily pattern of strikes from the Palestinian enclave.
Ashkelon, which is more than 10 km (six miles) north of the coastal strip, has generally been out of range but some more powerful rockets, notably Soviet-designed Katyushas or Grads, have struck the city of some 120,000 this year.
Rockets fired from Gaza have killed two Israeli civilians in the past week in agricultural communities closer to the border -- the first such deaths in over two months. In all, such rocket attacks have killed five Israelis in the past year. Continued...
















