Ceasefire takes effect in Gaza after killing of 34 Palestinians
Xinhua
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Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system fires interception missiles as rockets are launched from Gaza, as seen from the city of Ashkelon, Israel, November 13, 2019. (Photo: VCG)

Israel's army confirmed a ceasefire was agreed with Gaza's Islamic Jihad group on Thursday morning, ending two days of cross-border fire that claimed the lives of 34 Palestinians.  
"A two-day fighting has been concluded," Israel's military spokesman Hedi Zilberman told reporters, adding that the truce came into effect early on Thursday morning.

He said the fighting was part of an Israeli military operation to kill Palestinian Islamic Jihad's senior commander, Bahaa Abu al-Ata.
Al-Atta was killed in his home in Gaza city during predawn airstrikes that also killed his wife and wounded eight other people, according to Gaza health officials.

Zilberman said the operation "has achieved all of its aims quickly within 48 hours."
He said al-Atta was the mastermind behind "many" launches of rockets that hit Israel and planned to carry out more attacks. 
His killing triggered anger in Gaza and the Islamic Jihad vowed to avenge his death with rockets.  
At least 450 retaliatory rockets reached southern and central Israel over the past two days, according to official army figures. Some 60 percent of the rockets fell in open fields, and Israel's Iron Dome anti-rocket system intercepted 90 percent of the rest.
The rockets caused no fatalities but at least three people were injured by shrapnel, according to Israel's MDA medical emergency service.  
At the same time, Israeli warplanes and military drones struck "dozens" of sites in the Gaza Strip, including Islamic Jihad weapons factories, weapons warehouses, headquarters, launching sites, and training compounds.   
Also on Thursday, a spokesman with Islamic Jihad, Musab al-Breim, told reporters in Gaza that the ceasefire agreement came into effect on Thursday morning at 5:30 a.m. local time and has been mediated by Egypt.