SHEBAA, Lebanon, April 2 (IslamOnline & News
Agencies) - Israeli occupation forces shelled southern Lebanon
Tuesday, claiming that a Katyusha rocket landed in northern Israel
overnight, news agencies reported.
Eight Israeli shells exploded near the Lebanese border
village of Shebaa, accompanied by bursts of heavy machine-gun fire,
but no casualties were reported, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
Israeli security officials claimed that a single
rocket had exploded near the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona,
again without causing any damage or casualties.
But a United Nations spokesman said he had no report
of a Katyusha rocket being fired, the Israeli daily newspaper, Haaretz,
reported.
”The Israelis can say what they want, but we have no confirmation or
report on that incident yet,” said U.N. spokesman in southern
Lebanon Timor Goksel, according to the paper.”We are still inquiring
about it.”
He added that an escalation on the Israeli-Lebanese
border would be "very serious".
Israel, however, pinned the blame of the claimed
rocket on the Islamic resistance movement Hezbollah which forced
Israel to end its 20-year occupation.
The firing was reported Tuesday, April 2, at the end
of a news bulletin of Hezbollah's television channel Al-Manar, and was
unclaimed.
Israeli officials said the group was stepping up its
activities in support of the Palestinian uprising and warned its
backers Lebanon and Syria.
Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah said last month that
the movement, which was instrumental in forcing Israel to end its
20-year occupation, would not stand by if the Palestinians were faced
with "a war of extermination".
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri will
travel to Washington to meet U.S. President George W. Bush April 17,
Lebanese daily newspaper, As-Safir, reported Tuesday,
according to AFP.
Hariri's information office declined to confirm the
information reported by As-Safir's Washington
correspondent who said the talks will cover the "dangerous
situation in the region."
Lebanon holds the chair of the Arab summit, which last
week approved a peace initiative for the region put forward by Saudi
Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz, who is also expected to visit
the United States soon.