Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

IDF intercepts rocket from northern Gaza

Hamas rocket fire has significantly decreased but has not been eliminated.

Erez Crossing
The Erez Crossing to the northern Gaza Strip, Jan. 4, 2024. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

After air-raid sirens sounded in Kibbutz Erez in southern Israel, the Israeli Air Force intercepted one rocket launch that crossed from the northern Gaza Strip, the Israel Defense Forces reported on Tuesday.

While Hamas rocket fire has significantly decreased since the early days of the war as the IDF has consistently and severely degraded the terror group’s capabilities, it has not been eliminated.

Terrorist forces in Gaza launched a rocket at the border community of Kerem Shalom on Nov. 21, triggering sirens in the kibbutz, located at the Gaza-Israel-Egypt border near the crossing of the same name.

The rocket was successfully intercepted, causing no injuries or damage, according to the IDF.

A rocket from Gaza set off sirens in Kibbutz Erez on Nov. 13, impacting in an open area. No injuries were reported. The community is located less than a mile from the Strip’s northern border and is the namesake of the Erez Crossing.

On Nov. 25, the Israeli military reported that Abd el-Halim Abu Hussein, the head of rocket operations for Hamas’s Western Jabalia battalion, was among several terrorists killed in an Israeli airstrike in the northern Gaza city. He was responsible for numerous rocket and mortar attacks against Israeli civilians, as well as against Israeli forces in Gaza.

The strike also eliminated Muhammad Abd al-Rahman Muhammad Zakout, one of the Hamas terrorists who carried out the massacre of 1,200 men, women and children in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

PM delayed publication of annual medical report to prevent Iranian “false propaganda” during the war.
Keir Starmer made the pledge during a solidarity visit to a synagogue that jihadists had targeted.
The team’s success builds on a strong track record in international competition.
A new project creates personal matches between bereaved families and therapeutic dogs that touch wounded hearts through play, touch and their very presence.
Communities near Gaza push forward with resilience centers, therapy programs and infrastructure despite trauma.
Clalit study finds hospital-level care at home can improve outcomes as wartime pressures reshape patient treatment.