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Two rockets were fired Saturday from the Gaza strip at southern Israel, Israel's military said Saturday.
There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage in the incident,
which comes after a few days of relative quiet, though cross-fire
attacks have increased overall in recent weeks.
According to the Times of Israel, resident outside the Kibbutz Kissufim
community, just east of the Gaza border, reported hearing the sound of
an explosion, prompting security forces to begin searching for impact
sites.
The army later announced it had cancelled the revocation of about 500
permits allowing business owners to leave Gaza, since those retaliatory
sanctions were only to be lifted in exchange for the cessation of
attacks.
"The last thing I want is to send troops to Gaza ... but if they don't
stop, they'll have a very painful spring," Israeli defense minister
Naftali Bennett told an Israeli TV station, referring to Hamas and other
armed groups in Gaza.
According to Israeli media, moments before the attack, Bennett had
lauded a "dramatic decline" in rocket attacks since he took office in
November, saying there was an 80 percent drop between the last three
months before he took office and the first three months of his term.
The Times of Israel said it was not clear how he calculated that drop,
as statistics from the Shin Bet security service said Bennett's first
two days in office saw hundreds of rockets fired at Israel, versus 13
rockets and mortar shells in the three months prior.
Earlier this week senior officials of the Palestinian Authority were
targeted by a series of cyberattacks believed to have originated from
the Gaza Strip.
On Feb. 8, Israeli tanks shelled two Hamas military posts in the
northern Gaza Strip in what Israeli defense forces described as
retaliation for a rocket launched toward Israel from Gaza.
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