Mayor of frontline Israeli town quits over Gaza
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - The mayor of a town on the front line of Israel's conflict with Palestinian militants resigned live on radio on Wednesday in protest at the government's failure to halt rocket fire from Hamas-run Gaza.
Militants in the Gaza Strip, seized by Hamas Islamists from their Fatah rivals in June, fire short-range rockets and mortars every day at towns in southern Israel. While few cause damage or injury, the rockets spark widespread panic among residents.
Asked whether he could continue as mayor of the southern Israeli town of Sderot, Eli Moyal told Israel Radio: "You know what? I cannot. And I hereby inform you that I am resigning as mayor of Sderot right now."
Moyal, whose financial dealings are under police investigation but who has denied wrongdoing in the case, said he hoped his "sacrifice" would raise pressure for tougher action.
Located in the Negev desert, Sderot began as a transit camp for impoverished Jewish refugees from North Africa, and its residents have long complained of neglect by Israel's political establishment.
Among town notables is former defence minister Amir Peretz, whose villa was struck by a rocket last year in an incident that brought home, for many Israelis, the government's failures in the face of the salvoes.
GAZA INCURSION
The Jewish state on Tuesday mounted one of its biggest incursions into Gaza in recent months, sending dozens of tanks and armored vehicles into the territory and killing at least five gunmen. Olmert said Israel would "not stop" until the threat of rocket fire was removed.
In retaliation, Islamic Jihad militants fired at least 14 rockets and mortars into Israel on Wednesday. They said Moyal's resignation was "a clear victory for the resistance".
Moyal said almost 20 rockets had pounded Sderot by midday.
"One day a rocket will fall on a kindergarten and will kill 20 children and then the entire government, and entire country, will rush into war, unprepared," he said. "I don't want to be there when this happens."
Israel, which withdrew troops and settlers from Gaza in 2005 but still controls its borders, regularly launches raids into the coastal strip to try to curb rocket fire but reiterated on Wednesday a broader military offensive was not imminent.
A spokeswoman said the Interior Ministry had received Moyal's letter of resignation and that it would become effective within 48 hours.
(Additional reporting by Joseph Nasr and Dan Williams; Editing by Peter Millership)










