Israel-Gaza border falls quiet after ceasefire
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Israel approves 2,000 new WB settler homes
The Israel-Gaza border fell quiet yesterday under an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire after the most intense flareup of hostilities between Palestinian militants and Israel since a 2014 war.
Militants from Hamas, the dominant group in Gaza, and Islamic Jihad fired dozens of rockets and mortar bombs at Israel throughout Tuesday and overnight, to which Israel responded with tank and air strikes on more than 50 targets in the enclave.
There were no reports of further fighting after Palestinian and Israeli attacks in the early hours yesterday, and both sides appeared to back away from a slide towards a new war after weeks of violence along the border.
Schools opened as usual in Israeli towns near the frontier where rocket warning sirens sounded frequently on Tuesday. Gaza's streets were filled with morning shoppers and children went to class, reported Reuters.
A Palestinian official said Egyptian mediation led to a ceasefire, but the terms of the "understanding" did not go beyond "a restoration of calm by both sides".
"After the resistance succeeded in confronting the (Israeli) aggression ... there was a lot of mediation in the past hours," Hamas' deputy chief in Gaza, Khalil al-Hayya, said, in a nod to Egypt's efforts.
"An agreement was reached to return to the (2014) ceasefire understandings in the Gaza Strip. The resistance factions will abide by it as long as the Occupation does the same," Hayya said in a statement, using militant groups' term for Israel.
Meanwhile, Israel yesterday approved construction of 2,070 new settler homes in the occupied West Bank, Israeli settlement watchdog Peace Now told AFP.
It was slightly fewer than the 2,500 for which Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman said last week he intended to seek approval.
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