Israeli town in trauma from Palestinian rockets

Wed Jan 23, 2008 5:55pm GMT
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Rebecca Harrison

SDEROT, Israel (Reuters) - They may be reading the paper, shopping for groceries, putting the kids to bed. But when the siren sounds, the residents of this southern Israeli town drop everything and run for cover.

They have 15 seconds to reach one of the bomb shelters that dot Sderot, which lies just 1.5 km (1 mile) from the Gaza Strip and faces an almost daily barrage of Palestinian rockets. No one knows where the rockets will land.

"We are living in a war zone," said Hava Gad, a 42-year-old mother of three whose 9-year-old son is so traumatised by the constant salvoes that he refuses to sleep alone and soils himself almost daily.

Gad's hardscrabble home town, Sderot, is on the front line of the Jewish state's war with Islamist Hamas militants.

An Israeli blockade on Gaza, imposed last week after a surge of rocket fire, brought Sderot some respite while critically deepening Palestinian privation. On Wednesday, tens of thousands of Gazans stormed into neighbouring Egypt to stock up on food.

Gad voices no satisfaction at the worsening crisis in Gaza, which has overshadowed Israeli-Palestinian peace talks launched last November.

Nor does she pity the Palestinian rocket crews who have menaced Sderot and other Israeli border towns for years.

"I'm sure the simple citizens of Gaza want peace like us, but the militants, they want to kill us, so yes, honestly, I want to kill them," she told Reuters.  Continued...

 
Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling speaks at a Thomson Reuters newsmaker event in London October 21, 2009. REUTERS/Andrew Winning
Darling says stimulus stays

G20 policymakers are agreed that it is too early to pull the plug on economic life-support packages, Chancellor Alistair Darling tells Reuters.  Full Article 

Most Popular General News on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos
 A demonstrator pounds away the Berlin Wall as East Berlin border guards look on from above the Brandenburg Gate in this November 11, 1989 file photo. REUTERS/David Brauchli/File Photo
Berlin Wall anniversary

Twenty years after the Berlin Wall's fall, Reuters provides an in-depth, multimedia look at one of the 20th Century's defining moments.   Full Coverage