Israeli
army troops on Monday, May 28, 2012, shot and wounded several smugglers,
apparently attempting to ferry some two dozen infiltrators across the
border near the southern Red Sea port of Eilat, Israeli army sources said.
"Israeli Defense Forces soldiers (IDF) spotted 24 infiltrators north
of Eilat approaching the border fence, and responded according to standing
IDF rules of engagement and fired towards the infiltrators, who returned
fire," the IDF Spokesman told Xinhua (Chinese Press Agency).
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"Three
of the individuals who were wounded in the incident were taken to hospital
in Israel," according to the army, who added that no IDF troops were
hurt in the firefight.
Army radio said that four of the infiltrators were Bedouin smugglers,
one of whom managed to recross the border into Egypt, before the army
closed on the group.
The army has sharply increased patrols and electronic monitoring along
the 240-km desert border that stretches from Eilat in the south to Gaza
along the Mediterranean coast, due to a spike in security events and increased
infiltration attempts.
"The smuggling routes along the Israel-Egypt border are constantly
being used by terror organizations to execute terrorist attacks against
the citizens of Israel and IDF soldiers," the IDF spokesman said
at a recent press conference.
"Refugees from Egypt are used by terror cells in the Sinai Peninsula
(area in north Egypt) which are organized and financed by Hamas in Gaza,"
a senior Israeli army official said at the on- site briefing to the foreign
press alongside a segment of the fence where an explosive device was uncovered
in March.
The army is concerned that Bedouin smugglers will eventually manage to
breach the metal security barrier currently under construction along the
border.
The official noted that most of the infiltrations into Israel are either
being carried out or supported by Bedouin tribes in Israel and Egypt.
The Israeli government in January 2010 approved the construction of a
240-km, 1.5-billion-shekel (about 400 million U. S. dollars) steel fence,
and intended to thwart infiltrators, including job-seeking refugees, smugglers
or hostile cross-border attackers.
More than 100 kilometers of the barrier is already up, and officials expect
to finish the work by the end of the year.
In August 2011, militants killed eight Israeli motorists and wounded 30
others in a cross-border attack along a nearby road. The army has since
then deployed some of its crack infantry units to patrol the region and
upped the number of early-warning installations.
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