Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Massive ‘terror kite’ from Gaza successfully removed from Israeli power lines

A massive incendiary kite launched from Gaza landed on electric power lines near Kibbutz Sufa, sparking an emergency operation by the Israel Electric Company to remove it before it started an arson fire.

The huge terror kite that managed to reach power lines near Kibbutz Sufa, next to the Gaza border, on Aug. 11, 2018. Source: Israel Electric Company.
The huge terror kite that managed to reach power lines near Kibbutz Sufa, next to the Gaza border, on Aug. 11, 2018. Source: Israel Electric Company.

A massive incendiary kite launched from Gaza, measured to be about 13 feet wide, landed on electric power lines near Kibbutz Sufa on Saturday, sparking an emergency operation by the Israel Electric Company to remove the terror device before it started an arson fire.

The kite caused a power outage and was removed from the high-voltage lines using a crane.

Also on Saturday, police sappers neutralized a “terror balloon” that landed from Gaza next to a dining room in the Eshkol Region, and a fire was started in the Nir Am nature reserve by another incendiary terror device, although the blaze was brought under control by the afternoon.

More than 7,500 acres of land have been burned since Gazans started flying flammable kites and balloons into Israel in the spring. Millions of shekels in damage have been reported, including the destruction of agricultural fields, nature reserve land and the deaths of tens of thousands of bees, along with their honey-producing hives.

The IDF said the terrorist was using surveillance equipment.
In a targeted operation, Israeli forces found a weapons storage facility in the Rashaf area.
Bettan’s first performance of “Michelle” at Vienna’s Wiener Stadthalle drew applause as well as boos and whistles.
The group wedding at a Chabad shul included elderly couples who had been civilly married for years, alongside younger pairs whose wedding plans were delayed by the war.
“This survey shows how antisemitism impacting Jewish Australian women isn’t marginal; it’s widespread,” a Jewish leader tells JNS.
The report marks the first known instance of Riyadh carrying out military action on Iranian soil.