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    17
    Apr
    2013
    10:43am, EDT

    Islamist militants claim rocket attack on Israel Red Sea resort

    Egypt's military is searching for those behind a rocket attack that hit in the resort city of Eilat, Israel. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson and Lawahez Jabari, NBC News

    TEL AVIV – Israel’s Red Sea resort of Eilat was hit by two rockets fired from Egypt’s Sinai peninsula Wednesday, but there were was no sign of damage or injury.

    Hardline Islamic militant group Magles Shoura al-Mujahddin claimed responsibility in a statement on its website, Reuters reported.

    Noa Eliyah / AFP/Getty Images

    Israeli policemen inspect the site of a rocket explosion in Eilat, Wednesday.

    The statement said the attack was in retaliation for what it described as the Israeli army's attack on protesters demonstrating over the death of a Palestinian prisoner.

    Local television showed the casing of the one of the rockets lying in sand at a construction site in the resort city, Al Jazeera reported.

    Israel’s military said the rockets caused neither damage nor injury.

    The peninsula was demilitarized during the rule of dictator Hosni Mubarak, but since he was swept from power in the 2011 Arab Spring, Islamic militants have begun activities in the region.

    Reuters added:

    Ran Shauli / AP

    The scene of a rocket attack in Eilat, Israel, Wednesday.

    Israel deployed an Iron Dome anti-rocket battery in Eilat some two weeks ago, a period coinciding with the Jewish Passover holiday when the city at the tip of Gulf of Aqaba is packed with vacationers.

    But on Wednesday, the system did not intercept the incoming missiles ``for operational reasons'', a military spokeswoman said, without elaborating.

    Egypt's military said it was still investigating whether the rockets had come from Egypt.

    "We are still investigating to see if they were delivered from Egyptian territories but nothing is confirmed yet," a senior military official told agency AFP.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

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    48 comments

    Islam is a disease and its spreading.

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  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    4:33am, EDT

    Israeli police kill American gunman in hotel shoot-out

    Israeli police killed an American gunman who opened fire in a seaside hotel packed with tourists. NBC's Martin Fletcher reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated 4:45 p.m. ET: Israeli police have identified an American man believed to have shot to death a chef at a Red Sea resort on Friday, before being killed himself in a shootout with Israeli commandos, as William Hershkovitz, 23, of Poughkeepsie, New York.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Police surrounded the hotel  in the seaside city of Eilat after the man "grabbed a weapon from a security guard and shot a hotel worker," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

    The hotel employee who later died was identified as Abed Armando, 33, from an Arab village in northern Israel.

    The motive for the attack was still under investigation, according to police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld.


    Hershkovitz arrived in Israel about two months ago to participate in the Oranim program, which combines Hebrew study, travel and work at the hotel with a university course on hotel management.

    Hershkovitz lost his job at the Leonardo Club Hotel in the seaside town of Eilat a few days before the attack, according to Yuval Arad, an Oranim program spokesman. Arad said instructors met with Hershkovitz on Thursday following complaints by the hotel staff.

    "It was decided ... that he will leave the project and return on Tuesday to the U.S," Arad said in a statement, without elaborating.

     

    An Israeli hotel guest, Aviram Sela, said he tried to wrestle the gunman to the ground before he started shooting, as terrified tourists dived for cover behind a sofa in the hotel lobby.

    "We saw him beating the guard and grab his weapon and the magazine," Sela told Israeli television, adding that the gunman then took aim at a member of his family.

    The gunman barricaded himself in the hotel kitchen and fired at law enforcement officers.

    Authorities said the shooting did not appear to be related to terrorism or to be otherwise politically motivated.

    Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Army Radio the incident "appears to be an internal dispute."

    Haaretz reported that the Jewish Agency for Israel has appointed a committee to investigate how Hershkovitz was accepted to the work-study program, which is affiliated with the agency.

    Natan Sharanksy, chair of the agency, expressed deep sorrow on Friday over the loss of lives, and said that the Eilat shooting was an unusual incident, the Israeli newspaper said.

     

    Eliraz Getah / AP

    Soldiers secure the area near the site of a shooting incident at a hotel in the Red Sea resort town of Eilat, Israel, on Friday.

    "He was a normal guy," said Ofer Gutman, head of Oranim, speaking to The Associated Press. "There was nothing that indicated what would happen in the end."

    Eilat, on the border with Egypt and Jordan, has been a target of militant attacks in the past and has come under rocket fire from Egypt's Sinai in the past several months. The city is currently crowded with both foreign tourists and Israelis on a seven-day Jewish religious holiday. 

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    335 comments

    Israel, can we hire this force? Sounds like what we need. -R Emmanuel, Chicago mayor

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