A rocket fired from Gaza struck a residential home in southern Israel early on Wednesday and the Israeli military began attacking militant sites in Gaza in response after days of rising tensions.
The Magen David Adom medical service said a woman and her three children, whose home in Beersheba was hit, were being treated for shock.
They had fled to their shelter after warning sirens woke them up shortly before 4 a.m. The mother's swift response likely saved their lives, as the home was destroyed and debris was scattered throughout the street, damaging parked cars and adjacent structures.
Next-door neighbor Segev Naveh said he did not hear the warning sirens and was awoken by the massive blast.
"It was very scary," he said. "If it was falling on my house, I would be dead for sure." The medical service said two other Beersheba residents were injured during the panic to seek cover.
The military said another rocket from Gaza landed in the sea, just off the coast of one of the larger cities in central Israel. No injuries were reported.
Following the attacks, schools in Beersheba were closed and Israel's military chief was cutting short his visit to the United States to come back and manage the crisis.
As a first response, Israeli military jets pounded Hamas targets across the Gaza Strip. The Gaza Health Ministry said a 25-year-old militant was killed inside one of the posts targeted. Three other people were wounded.
Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, a military spokesman, said 20 Hamas targets were struck, including offensive tunnels, weapon workshops and naval shafts. The military released video purportedly showing militants preparing to fire another rocket toward Israel before they were targeted.
The rocket attack on Beersheba was the first in months and the first that hit an Israeli home there since the 2014 summer war between Israel and Gaza's militant Hamas rulers. Beersheba, which is some 50 kilometers (30 miles) from Gaza, is the biggest city in southern Israel, with a population of around 200,000.
Israel and Hamas have fought three wars over the past decade and fighting has flared up on several occasions recently, though neither side appears to be interested in another full-blown war. Egypt has been trying to mediate a long-term cease-fire.
In a rare move, seemingly aimed at easing the tensions, the "joint coordination room of resistance factions," which includes Hamas, Islamic Jihad and others, issued a statement distancing the groups from the rocket fire.
"We reject all irresponsible attempts that try to change the direction and sabotage the Egyptian efforts, including the overnight firing of the rocket," they said.
"At the same time, we emphasize we are ready to confront the Israeli aggression." The head of Egyptian intelligence, Abbas Kamel, was scheduled to visit Gaza this week to renew cease-fire talks. But late Wednesday, Hamas announced his visit had been called off.
"We are sorry that minister Abbas Kamel has canceled his visit to Gaza and Ramallah," Moussa Abu Marzouk, a top Hamas official, wrote on Twitter.
However, a team of other Egyptian security officials was already on its way to try and calm things down.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, held briefings along the Gaza border, vowing that "Israel will act with great force." Conricus rejected the militants' statement, saying the rocket that struck Beersheba was a mid-range, locally produced weapon that was in the possession of only two groups: Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Israel holds Hamas responsible for all violence emanating from the territory it controls.
"Israel will not stand by while our people are under attack, and the world must know that," Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said as he hosted Nickolay Mladenov, the U.N. Mideast envoy.
Mladenov, who has been involved in the recent efforts to mediate a truce, said the rocket fire "fit a pattern of provocations that seek to bring Israel and Gaza into another deadly conflict."
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