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Hezbollah fires new type of missile at Israel

by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Jul 28, 2006
Hezbollah fired a new type of missile at Israel Friday, police said, in one of its deepest strikes onto Israeli territory on the 17th day of the Lebanon crisis.

"At least one missile of unknown type carrying around 100 kilograms (220 pounds) of explosives hit the town of Afula," police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld told AFP.

Five explosive devices in all had landed in Afula, which nearly 50 miles (30 miles) south of Israel's border with Lebanon, without causing any casualties or damage, police said.

Police said the mysterious missile was not the Iranian-made Zelzal, as reported earlier in the Israeli media.

"Police sappers who analyzed the missile confirmed that it was not the Iranian Zelzal" as reported earlier by Israel's Channel 10, Rosenfeld said.

In Beirut, Shiite militant group Hezbollah said its guerrillas had fired for the first time a salvo of what it called "Khaibar I" missiles at Afula.

"The Islamic Resistance fired at 3:00 pm (1200 GMT) a salvo of Khaibar I missiles on the Zionist region of Afula, beyond Haifa," the Hezbollah statement said.

On Wednesday, Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah vowed that his guerrillas would fire rockets at Israel beyond the northern city of Haifa.

Until Friday Hezbollah had been using shorter-range Katyusha rockets to attack Israel.

The assault on Afula came on the same day that the Israeli army said it would deploy Patriot anti-missile batteries near Tel Aviv -- Israel's biggest city -- in case Hezbollah starts using long-range missiles.

Hezbollah has fired more than 1,500 rockets at Israel since July 12, when its guerrillas captured two Israeli soldiers and killed eight others in a deadly cross-border raid that sparked the Jewish state's offensive on Hezbollah in Lebanon.

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Israeli army chief taken to hospital for tests: report
Jerusalem (AFP) Jul 28, 2006
The Israeli army chief of staff, General Dan Halutz, fell ill Friday and was taken to hospital for tests, Channel 10 television reported.







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