Israel launches more air strikes on Gaza

Israel launched fresh missile strikes in Gaza early today, a day after it killed six Hamas militants, and vowed to keep targeting…

Israel launched fresh missile strikes in Gaza early today, a day after it killed six Hamas militants, and vowed to keep targeting gunmen to prevent rocket attacks ahead of its withdrawal from Gaza next month.

The latest air raid injured two Palestinian bystanders and destroyed three workshops in Gaza City and the Khan Younis refugee camp, which the army said was used by Hamas to produce weapons.

Palestinians denied weapons were produced there. Militants hit back this morning, firing two rockets at the Israeli town of Sderot, near the Gaza Strip. One of the rockets slammed into the courtyard of a house but nobody was hurt, the army said.

The other landed in an empty field. A flare-up of violence in Gaza and the West Bank, which began on Tuesday when a Palestinian suicide bomber killed five people in an attack in the coastal town of Netanya, has badly undermined a cessation to hostilities declared by Israel and the Palestinian Authority in February.

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It has also raised the prospect of a disruption to Israel's planned pullout of 8,500 settlers from occupied Gaza next month which had stirred new hopes of reviving Middle East peace. One Israeli woman has been killed and two others wounded in rocket barrages on Israeli towns and villages near Gaza over the past two days.

The Israeli army said since Thursday militants have fired 25 rockets and 52 mortars. Palestinian Interior Minister Nasser Yousef said the Israeli missile strikes were unjustified and would create more tension.

He added that the Palestinian leadership was trying to salvage the truce which he said no faction had the right to end. Faced with a collapsing truce, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arranged an unscheduled visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories next week to "encourage both sides to take appropriate seps to restore order," a spokesman said.

"They need to make (a) maximum effort ... both individually and working together, to ensure that this withdrawal is a successful withdrawal," said a State Department spokesman.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has said the army would put a stop to rocket barrages and attacks by Gaza militants ahead of the withdrawal which is scheduled to begin in mid-August with the evacuation of all 21 settlements in Gaza.

Agencies