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At least 11 dead, mostly children, after Hezbollah rocket strikes Israeli playground in deadliest attack since Oct. 7


At least 11 people — mostly children and young adults between the ages of 10 and 20 — were killed on Saturday when a Hezbollah rocket struck a soccer field in Israel-controlled Golan Heights in what is now the deadliest attack on the Jewish state since the Oct. 7 Hamas incursion.

The shelling by the Lebanese terror group targeted the northern Druze town of Majdal Shams, officials confirmed, adding such an escalation could ramp up the ongoing war even further as Israeli leadership immediately gathered to weigh its response.

Foreign Minister Israel Katz discussed the deadly attack with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and declared that “Hezbollah crossed all red lines” and the Jewish state was now “facing an all-out war” with the Lebanese terrorists.

“I have no doubt that we’ll pay a cost,” Katz said, adding Hezbollah will pay a higher toll for its actions.

When Israel does retaliate, Katz claimed it would have the “full backing” of the United States and Europe.

After receiving word of Hezbollah’s attack, Netanyahu rushed back to Israel, from Washington, DC, moving his flight up by three and a half hours.

He was still in the nation’s capital on Saturday after addressing Congress Wednesday and having separate meetings with President Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

Up to 40 people were reported injured in the attack, with a handful listed in critical condition.

Hezbollah denies carrying out the attack, which unfolded hours after an Israeli airstrike on south Lebanon killed three members of the militant group.

At least 10 people, including several children, were killed Saturday by a Hezbollah rocket fired into northern Israel that struck a playground and soccer field in the Golan Heights town of Majdal Shams. AFP via Getty Images
More than a dozen others were wounded in Saturday’s attack. AFP via Getty Images

The injured were taken to three local clinics, according to Idan Avshalom of Israel’s national emergency service.

“I left a nearby kibbutz and arrived at the scene within a few minutes. I saw a large commotion on the soccer field, with severe scenes of casualties and fatalities, destruction and burning objects,” he said according to a post on the agency’s Facebook.

Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) issued a statement shortly after the attack, saying, “Since October 7, Hezbollah has been bombarding Israel with rockets, displacing up to [100,000] Israelis and terrorizing many more. The murder of [these] children is the latest manifestation of Hezbollah’s unrelenting terror.”

Officials expect the death toll will likely rise, as some of the wounded were listed in critical condition at nearby hospitals. REUTERS
Israeli security forces and local residents gather at a site where a reported strike from Lebanon fell in Majdal Shams village. AFP via Getty Images

Hezbollah said it “has no connection to the incident at all, and categorically denies all false allegations.” The Iran-backed group did not suggest another culprit.

Israel Defense Forces issued a statement putting the blame on the Iran-backed group, which has been lobbing rockets over Israel’s northern border since the war with Hamas started after that terror organization’s brutal Oct. 7 attack on Southern Israel.

In other developments, Israel once again warned Palestinians in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis to evacuate on Saturday before conducting armed raids on military facilities and possible Hamas terrorist cells.

Palestinians inspect the damage following an Israeli strike on the Khadija school housing displaced people in Deir al-Balah. AFP via Getty Images
Palestinians flee from parts of Khan Younis following an evacuation order by the Israeli army. AP

The IDF also reportedly destroyed a launch site in the district of Zeitoun, from where Hamas previously launched missiles and drones aimed at Israel.

IDF soldiers also shelled a school Saturday, responding to intelligence that Hamas militants had returned and re-embedded themselves there, and established a command center with a cache of weapons.

Reports indicate the airstrike on the Khadija school in Deir-al Balah killed approximately 30 people with another 100 said to have sustained serious injuries. Thousands of people were sheltering at the school at the time.

Many of the wounded were women and children, an Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital official said.

A photo of CIA director Bill Burns. REUTERS

Separately, Israel reportedly presented U.S. officials with an updated hostage and ceasefire deal on Saturday, an Israeli senior official and two other inside sources told Axios reporter Barak Ravid.

The proposal came ahead of another round of peace talks in Rome starting Sunday that will be joined by CIA director Bill Burns, along with Mossad’s director David Barnea, the Prime Minister of Qatar and the head of Egypt’s intelligence.

Hamas was accused of being “obstinate” on the resolution of the conflict, insisting any deal for peace include provisions establishing how the war will be ended and further mandating Israel withdraw all troops from Gaza.

Fleeing Palestinians leave Khan Younis, following an evacuation order from the IDF. AP

Meanwhile, Palestinian Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for firing a separate barrage of rockets from Gaza towards southern Israel.

Three rockets were fired from Gaza at the community of Ashkelon, marking the first attack launched by Jihadists this month.

One of the rockets was taken out by the infamous Iron Dome while the two others struck open areas, resulting in zero casualties.

With Post wires



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