Israeli regime tanks attack Hamas following balloon attacks by Gaza

The Israeli regime army has stated that its tanks have hit Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip on Sunday after Palestinian balloon attacks across the border continued.
An early-morning military statement said there had been
airborne explosive and incendiary attacks into southern Israel on Saturday.
There were no immediate reports of casualties from any of
the incidents.
Palestinian sources said an Israeli artillery shell was
fired towards a field control point east of Khan Younis, and another shell east
of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip.
According to the Israeli fire brigade, the fire bombs -
crude devices fitted to balloons, inflated condoms or plastic bags inflated
with helium - have triggered more than 400 blazes in southern Israel.
The Israeli army has carried out attacks on Gaza almost
daily since August 6, along with further tightening a devastating blockade it
has imposed on the Palestinian territory since 2007.
Under the new measures, it banned the entry of fuel for
Gaza's sole power plant, plunging it into darkness.
The Gaza Strip has a population of two million people, more
than half of whom live in poverty, according to the World Bank.
The head of the Hamas political bureau, Ismail Haniya, said
his movement - which controls the Gaza Strip - would not back down from wanting
to end the Israeli blockade.
"Our decision and the decision of our people is to go
ahead with ending this unjust siege in all its forms," Haniya said in a
statement issued by his office early on Sunday.
"The leadership of the movement is closely following
the current situation in the Gaza Strip in terms of communications and
mediation carried out by many parties to work to break and end the siege on the
strip."
An Egyptian delegation has been shuttling between the two
sides to try to broker a renewal of an informal truce under which Israel
committed to easing its 13-year blockade of Gaza in return for calm on the
frontier between the two.
It was joined this week by Qatar's Gaza envoy Mohammed
al-Emadi who delivered the latest tranche of $30m in aid to the territory on
Tuesday before holding talks with Israeli officials in Tel Aviv.
Sources close to the Qatari delegation said Israeli
officials had told al-Emadi they were willing to end a punitive ban on fuel
deliveries for Gaza's power plant and ease their blockade if there was an end
to the incendiary balloons.
Financial aid for the impoverished territory from gas-rich
Qatar had been a significant component of the truce, first agreed in November
2018 and renewed several times since.
Under those terms, Israel had said it would take other measures to alleviate unemployment of more than 50 percent in the territory of some two million people. Those have yet to materialize.