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Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results
Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060
Kiryat Shmona
Takes To Shelters
Tel Aviv (JTA) — Islamic
fundamentalist forces lobbed
Katyusha rockets into a
broad swathe of northern
Israel Sunday night, forcing
residents of Kiryat Shmona
into shelters.
Several salvos of rockets
fell in an area extending
from western Galilee to the
Galilee panhandle, ge-
nerating a number of crop
fires. But they caused no
casualties or other damage.
The attack followed a raid
by Israeli aircraft on Hez-
bollah bases at Ein a-Tine,
north of the Israeli-
controlled security zone in
southern Lebanon.
Kiryat Shmona children
started school an hour late
at the beginning of the week
and the authorities canceled
all school trips along the
border area with Lebanon.
The latest round of
violence triggered public dif-
ferences over Israel's re-
sponse to Hezbollah attacks
amid ongoing peace talks in
Washington.
Reserve Maj. Gen. Ori Orr,
chairman of the Knesset
Foreign Affairs and Defense
Committee, urged "wise and
careful examination" of up-
dated intelligence informa-
tion before deciding on an
appropriate Israeli response,
with intent to calm the area.
Maj. Gen. Orr was com-
mander of the northern sec-
tor in 1986, when similar
Katyusha attacks were
lobbed at Galilee, which
then, too, sent residents of
Kiryat Shmona into
shelters. At the time, Maj.
Gen. Orr said the Israel
Defense Force would act
swiftly against the sources of
the rocket fire as soon as
they were found.
Those attacks were accom-
panied by terrorist incidents
in Jerusalem and the ter-
ritories.
Following this latest at-
tack, a former chief of staff
said the Hezbollah attack
was an act of war and should
be responded to in kind.
Knesset member Rafael
Eitan, leader of the opposi-
tion Tsomet party, said 21
Katyushas had landed last
weekend in Galilee.
The upsurge in violence
followed a week of relative
quiet after the border heated
up with the killing by Hez-
bollah of five Israeli soldiers
in the security zone and a
Katyusha attack which
killed a 14-year-old boy in
Kiryat Shmona.
The quiet was in line with
a policy of discouraging
escalation, which was ap-
parently adopted by the
Israeli military estab-
lishment.
The attack by Israeli air-
craft was explained as a re-
sponse to the continued
planting by Hezbollah of
roadside bombs directed at
Israeli troops and allied
South Lebanese Army forces
inside the security zone.
Two Hezbollah members
were killed in the raid and
two more were wounded.
Spokesmen for the pro-
Iranian terrorist organiza-
tion threatened to retaliate
for every life lost among
their ranks.
Italians Rally
Against Racism
Rome (JTA) — Tens of
thousands of people all over
Italy took part in demon-
strations against racism and
anti- Semitism on the 54th
anniversary of
Kristallnacht.
The demonstrations were
given added meaning be-
cause of a series of anti-
Semitic incidents over the
past week and the attack by
dozens of Jewish youths on
the offices of a neo-Nazi
skinhead group in Rome.
As many as 30,000 or more
people, mostly students,
marched through Rome, car-
rying banners and chanting
slogans calling for racial
harmony.
Many wore badges depic-
ting a yellow Star of David
— such as the Nazis forced
Jews to wear — emblazoned
with the words "Never
Again."
At the head of the march
was a group of Italian Holo-
caust survivors, who stress-
ed that the events of 50
years ago must never be
forgotten.