The Iron Dome defense system, deployed last month in Eilat,
intercepted a rocket aimed at an inhabited area in the region on early morning
Wednesday. Magen David Adom reported two persons were treated for anxiety
attacks.
Shortly before 1 am a siren was heard in Israel's
southernmost city and residents reported they heard echoes of two explosions in
the area. The IDF and the police are canvassing the area and so far no further
landing sites were found.
Noi, 22, who works in a hotel in the city, said she heard
several explosions. "People were running from the rooms to the stairs
after the siren was activated," she recounted.
"The hotel has a shelter in the bottom floor, but it is
still relevant as far as response time is concerned. During the siren we heard
the explosions."
The explosions were also heard in Eilat's Shahamon
neighborhood. Chen, 35, said she heard "two bangs. It's stressful, we were
woken up, and now will sleep in the bomb shelter."
Meanwhile, Palestinian sources reported that the extremist
Salafist group Ansar Bayt Al-Maqdis, which operates in the Sinai Peninsula,
claimed responsibility for the rocket launched early morning Wednesday at
Eilat.
However, these reports were not corroborated and the group
has yet to issue a formal statement.
Four of the group's members were killed on Friday near
Egyptian Rafah in an airstrike attributed to the IDF by foreign media.
Last Thursday the airspace in the Eilat area was shut down
for two hours, due to a security assessment.
Last month the IDF deployed an Iron Dome battery in Eilat.
The battery was deployed at the height of the tourist season for fear the city
would become the target of rocket fire. The IDF has arranged that the city's
siren system be connected to the alert systems installed on the Israel-Egypt
border, so that rockets launched toward the city will trigger the siren system.
Over the last two weeks the worldwide alert has been raised
due to concerns of a coordinated al-Qaeda attack. Among others, the US embassy
in Tel Aviv was shut down.
According to reports, the reason for the raised alert was a
conference call held by al-Qaeda heads worldwide.
Following the US's lead, Western delegations in the Arab
world and in Africa were closed down, while concerns focused on a possible
attack in Yemen.
According to the Daily Beast, the presence of aspiring
al-Qaeda affiliated groups operating in Sinai was a major factor in the State
Department's call to close the US embassy in Tel Aviv, the report quoted one US
intelligence official as saying. “These guys already proved they could hit Eilat. It’s not out of the range of possibilities that they could hit us in Tel Aviv,” the official said.
This is not the first time that Eilat suffered rocket fire
this summer. About a month ago a rocket was fired from Sinai into Israeli
territory, and five days later the IDF found the landing site in an open
terrain near Eilat.
Last April two rockets were fired at the city, causing no
injury or damage. That was the first time a siren was heard in the city.
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