Four rockets launched from the Gaza Strip struck Israel yesterday despite an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire announced by Palestinian faction Islamic Jihad after the most intense cross-border violence since the 2012 war.

No one was hurt by the evening rocket salvo, the Israeli army said. With winter rainstorms keeping people indoors and Iron Dome interceptors shooting down some rockets, the two-day flare-up has been elatively free of casualties.

Israel’s hardline Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman called for reoccupation of the enclave, an unlikely step since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reacted with measured language.

Islamic Jihad, an Iranian-backed faction that has sometimes operated independently of Gaza’s Hamas government, began the barrage on Wednesday after Israel’s forces killed three of its fighters a day earlier.

Yesterday afternoon, Islamic Jihad leader Khaled al-Batsh announced that the truce ending the eight-day war of November 2012 between Israel and Gaza militants would resume if the Israelis complied.

“Following intensive Egyptian contacts and efforts, the agreement for calm has been restored in accordance with understandings reached in 2012 in Cairo,” he said on Facebook.

There was no public response from Israel, but a senior Defence Ministry official said earlier in the day he expected the fighting to die down soon. Minutes before Batsh posted word of the truce, Israeli aircraft struck targets in Rafah, in southern Gaza near the border with Egypt, wounding three Palestinians, witnesses said.

The Israeli military said “seven terror sites” had been hit.

On Wednesday, Israel carried out 29 air strikes and its tanks shelled militant targets in Gaza as Islamic Jihad fired 60 rockets. There were no casualties in Wednesday’s exchange.

There was no claim in Gaza for the rockets launched after the ceasefire announcement, raising the possibility that a faction other than Islamic Jihad was responsible.

Netanyahu said Israel would “hit back with increasing force” against anyone who tried to ruin celebrations over the next few days of the Jewish holiday of Purim.

Lieberman, Netanyahu’s far-right partner in the coalition government, called for Israel to retake Gaza, which it quit in 2005 after 28 years of occupation in a unilateral move that boosted Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

“The only solution to this situation of a ceaseless cycle of terror is re-occupation of Gaza and a clean-out of the stables there,” Lieberman said on Facebook.

The time was ripe, he said, as the military government in Cairo has clamped down on Egypt’s border with Gaza and shunned Hamas.

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